Oklahoma Conference of The UMC
Department of Communications
Re-ignite Workshops 2014
How to publish an
effective digital church newsletter
What we will cover
• What is a digital (electronic) newsletter?• Ways to publish an e-newsletter• What to consider before starting your newsletter• How to design a newsletter• How to avoid SPAM filters• Resources for more information on how to create
e-newsletters.
What is a digital e-newsletter?
It is the electronic counterpart to traditional print newsletters, and it typically is sent out to subscribers on a regular interval.
Available either on the Web or via e-mail subscription, either free or paid.
In this class we will present formats that are simple to prepare, easy to read, and help prevent your e-newsletter from being flagged as SPAM.
Ways to publish an e-newsletter1. Create a PDF document, post on your website, and then
email the link to subscribers. (print format sent electronically)
2. Publish your PDF to an online publication service such as Issuu or Scribd. (from print format converted to a digital format)
3. Use an online email marketing service such as MailChimp. (created in a digital format within the software provided by MailChimp or other service.)
4. Create a page on your website and then email subscribers the link to the page. (created using code -- HTML or other code in a sofware program [Dreamweaver, Wordpress, etc.] or by hand-coding)
5. Create a PDF document and then email it as an attachment. (print format)
This fifth format seems to dominate church e-communications. But is there a better way?
Before you start your e-newsletter
Consider where your newsletter will be openedPeople are using a wide range of devices.
They may look at your email any time of day, using many different email clients (Outlook, Yahoo, Apple Mail, Gmail, etc.), and also amid a lot of distractions.
Understand the purpose of the content• Who is your audience?• What’s in it for them? • How will your e-newsletter help your reader?• Do the articles celebrate successes?
Designing your e-newsletter• Document setup
The page dimensions really depend on what your end product will be – print to pdf, code (html) format, etc.
• Establish a hierarchy (applies to both print and digital)
Put your most important information first.
Remind your readers what is happening in the next few days.
• Keep it simple (applies to both print and digital)
Less is more. Keep design and copy minimal.
Keep it short and engaging.
Good email writing is conversational, less formal, and RELEVANT.
Designing• Keep it legible (applies to both print and digital)
Avoid placing light text on a light background or dark text on a dark background.Use the correct font size.
• Provide adequate spacing (applies to both print and digital)
Use margins, padding around your elements, creating negative space.
• Align your elements (applies to both print and digital)
Keep your margins the same width or spacing between lines the same height, etc.
• Coordinate your colors (applies to both print and digital)
Again, determine the reaction you want your content to elicit. Warm colors=energetic. Cool colors= calm.
• Avoid using Word Art or generic clip art!
Designing• Don’t overuse drop shadows• Strive for consistency• Use a responsive design (important for digital formats, not for print)
Responsive Web Design (RWD) is a Web design approach aimed at crafting sites to provide an optimal viewing experience. RWD adapts the view for the mobile device.
• Appealing imagesBut not too many. Reduce image sizes for Web use. (applies to digital format)
• Incorporate your Facebook page into your e-newsletter.
You have to promote the page to get new fans. Most new fans come from mentioning the page in e-mail newsletters and asking people to become fans.
Designing
Anatomy of an email newsletterBoth print-to-pdf and coded newsletters should use this
layout.• Address
To: Receiver’s name. From: Your name. 73% of emails are judged as SPAM by looking at the “From” line. Subject: 35% of email users open a message because of the subject line content.
• PreheaderPlaced at the top of the newsletter.
HeaderContains your logo, navigation links, social media icons.
Anatomy• Primary message
One paragraph at the maximum. Use a bold title, one paragraph of text, and a call to action.Top left corner is the most important area.
• Secondary messagesSet on the right side or below primary message. Adds value, may have an image, a call to action, and short description.
• Index This is your newsletter table of contents.
• FooterGives additional chances to click through to other material.
PreheaderHeaderPrimary messageSecondary messages
IndexFooter
Sample e-newsletter =
How to avoid SPAM filters
• Spam filters calculate a “spam score” to detect junk mail.
To determine whether an e-mail is spam, most filters consider a number of different attributes, such as content, length, percentage of text, use of images, number of recipients, headers, etc.
SPAM
• Subscriptions ONLYConfirm that your newsletter was received. You must have permission to send to every single one of your recipients. CAN-SPAM rules comprise best practices for email for any organization.
• Avoid attachments• Keep your sender’s name and email consistent
For example, if you use “From: [email protected] “ always use that in future messages.
• Motivate your users to add your email to their whitelists within their email client.
SPAM
• Follow-up with U.S. MailIf possible, follow-up on your newsletter e-mail with a “snail mail” version sent to your readers’ postal addresses.
• Send e-newsletters regularlyYour subscribers will come to “expect” your email to arrive in their inbox on the same day, at the same time.
SPAM• Always insert the current date in the content.
• Text-to-Image Ratio (for digital format)
The percentage of text should be higher than the percentage of HTML or images.
• Use CSS sparingly (for digital formats, coded)
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a style sheet language used to describe the presentation semantics (the look and formatting) of a document written in a markup language.
• Avoid graphics and complex HTML elements (for digital formats, coded)
Many readers use software (e.g. Outlook) that automatically blocks images.
SPAM
• Test your newsletters before sending them out.You can check the “spam score” of your newsletters with Lyris ContentChecker http://www.lyris.com/us-en/contentchecker for email.
SPAM-prevention guidelinesA few “don’ts”:• go crazy with exclamation points!!!!!!• USE ALL CAPS BECAUSE IT'S LIKE YELLING IN AN
EMAIL• code sloppy HTML • use color fonts -- bright red or green• use the word "test" in the subject line• create an HTML email that’s nothing but one big
image, with little or no text
Resources• Color palette sites for ideas
http://design-seeds.com/http://www.colorschemedesigner.com/
• Photo editinghttp://pixlr.com/Google Picasa (http://picasa.google.com/)
• PDF creators SourceForge http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator/ Pdfforge http://www.pdfforge.org/pdfcreator
Resources• Articles from the Oklahoma United Methodist
Contact (www.okumc.org - Conference Publications – News Archive)
• United Methodist News Service Sign up to receive the Daily or Weekly email news digest complied by UMNS. Go to www.umc.org – Our World –News.
• Observe copyright lawsAn item appearing on the Web does not confer free use.
And claiming “anonymous” will not protect your church from costly litigation.
Email Marketing ServicesWe are not endorsing these companies. You need to do your own research
and decide what is best for your church.
• MailChimp http://mailchimp.com/• Constant Contact http://www.constantcontact.com • JangoMail https://www.jangomail.com/ • Emma http://myemma.com/ • Vertical Response (10,000 emails per month free)
http://www.verticalresponse.com/non-profit/pricing • GraphicMail (10,000 emails per month free)
http://www.graphicmail.com/gm/solutions/marketing-nonprofit/
Email Marketing ServicesWe are not endorsing these companies. You need to do your own research
and decide what is best for your church.
• ChurchPost.com (fee-based)
• Graphic Mail (fee-based)
http://www.graphicmail.com/gm/home/
• MyNewsletterBuilder
http://www.mynewsletterbuilder.com/
Thank you for coming today.Let us know how we can help.
Department of Communications1501 N.W. 24th St.
Oklahoma City, OK 73106-3635