Speak To Your Audience
Newsletters and blogs are great ways to speak directly to your patients or clients about issues they care about and keep them informed on developments in their fields.
Newsletters and blogs are great ways to speak directly to your patients or clients about issues they care about and keep them informed on developments in their fields.
What are newsletters and blogs?
Newsletters and blogs are two key ways businesses communicate with customers. Blogs are part of a website’s content. Newsletters are usually separate from a website and sent to customers who sign up to receive them.
Blog content, delivered through posts on a website, is a business-oriented diary or log of what an individual observes in the business or broader industry. In fact, the word “blog” was created from “web log.”
Blogs are part of a website
Blogs are part of a website listed under their own tag. You can give your blog a name that echoes your business name or reflects it. If you’re a specialty pharmacy, for example, you can use a name like Specialty Pharma News. Just be sure it isn’t used by a competitor or copyrighted.
Most blogs are scheduled with topics to go out at least once a week, but blogs can be pretty spontaneous. If you’re a specialty physician, you may want to be the first to blog about a new NDA (new drug application), so the regularly scheduled topic can be bumped.
Blogs can be less formal than webpage content or a newsletter. They should have at least 500 words each.
Newsletters are formal communications to customers
Newsletters are official communications actively sent to customers. They’re useful marketing and communications tools, especially when you have a lot to say outside of a blog. Unlike blogs, newsletters are sent to readers who have given you permission to email them directly.
Ideally, newsletters should be about actual news you curate for your audience. Examples of newsletter articles include trends you’ve observed in their industries and regulations that impact them. You can use newsletters to announce your own news, too, about new products or services, or early-bird sales for your readers.
Here’s a good blog post (yes, the irony) about what a newsletter can do for a business.
You can post newsletters on your site after they have been sent out to regular readers. Be a little judicious about this – post just a few so that the content remains “exclusive” to your email list.
Why do I need a blog and newsletter?
Ideally, you should have both a blog and a newsletter because they serve different marketing purposes and sometimes, different audiences as well. There can be content overlap between the two as well – just make sure the content isn’t identical.
As we noted, newsletters are sent to people who actively intend to read your news. You might want to give them small rewards like coupons and access to readers-only discounts. You can think of your newsletter readers as those who take a more active interest in your industry and perhaps even your business. And of course, you can create snippets from your headlines to get people to visit your website and subscribe.
A blog is more wide-ranging and available to anyone who can find it. They are web-based from the start and are a relatively easy way to update your site. They’re perfect material for sharing to social media sites.
“I can’t do both a newsletter and blog!”
If you feel you must choose between one or the other, consider what benefits your target audience most.
John Townsend of The Content Panel notes that blogs are more far-reaching than newsletters and live on the web indefinitely as long as they remain useful.
I’d counter that a really good newsletter in a niche area can get widely shared and establish your reputation. I have experienced that myself.
What can I expect from a blog and newsletter?
Timely and well-written newsletters and blogs will pay off because they help you establish yourself in the marketplace.
Having both a blog and newsletter reinforces so many parts of a marketing campaign.
2024 Rates
Here are my 2024 rates for blogs and newsletters:
While 500 words are usually cited as the minimum for blogs, many SEO experts recommend 600 words or more depending on the depth of the topic.
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