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| Ben Dean, Ph.D. | Building a Coaching or Consulting Practice: Writing a Reader-Friendly E-mail Newsletter Context: In the Summer IP, we discussed ways to market a virtual coaching practice (a coaching practice delivered by telephone, fax, and E-mail) to a market that encompasses at least all of North America (Dean, 1999a). In addition, we examined: The importance of marketing to a tightly focused market niche; A model of virtual marketing (The Funnel of Trust) in which one initially attempts to build a relationship of increasing trust with ones target market by providing prospective clients with free, useful information on a repeated basis; and One strategy, among many, for doing thispublishing a free E-mail newsletter that speaks to the concerns of your prospects in a clear, compelling manner month after month. Here well examine ways writing an E-mail newsletter differs from writing for print, and well suggest specific ways to make your newsletter web worthy. The Research: A growing body of web usability studies indicates that reading from a computer screen is quite different than reading from paper (Dillon, 1994; Shum,1996; Morkes and Nielsen, 1997, 1998; Spool, 1997; Killian, 1999). For example, people approach the web with an air of impatience and urgency. In fact, with E-mail and the web, people rarely readthey scan. And when they do read online, their pace is slow 25 percent slower than when reading print (Nielsen, 1998). Further, they distrust marketese, language that seems like marketing hype. They prefer factual information. As a result, writing for the web should be succinct, easy to scan, and objective (rather than promotional) in style (Morkes and Nielsen, 1997). Tips on Writing for the Web Ive now helped a number of colleagues develop their own E-mail newsletters as theyve added virtual coaching to their practices. Based on this experience, my own newsletters (Dean 1999b, 1999c), and Web usability studies, Ill list nine tips for writing a reader-friendly E-mail newsletter: 1. Your E-mail Newsletter Begins With a Wisely Selected Target Market. Effective marketing to a North American or global market requires a narrow focus. Good niches meet a number of criteria that include, but are not limited to, a burning need, an underserved population with discretionary income, and prospective clients with whom you enjoy spending time. In your virtual marketing plan, you should plan to help a specific target group solve a set of significant problems and/or reach important goals. In your E-mail newsletter, you will focus on the most meaningful problems and opportunities of people in that target group. 2. A Single Idea, Concisely Treated, Is Enough. A single focus per issue, treated in as few as 700 to 900 words, is enough. Multi-section newsletters are fine if they are succinct (see # 7 below), but they require more time, the busy clinicians scarcest resource. Many successful E-mail newsletters use a single focus per issue. 3. Write in Plain Text. Your E-mail software, like mine, may allow you to produce text replete with italics, bolding, true and signs, underlining, even color and full html. But many of your readers can see only plain text and will receive your grace notes as gibberish. Discipline yourself to stick with plain ASCII text. To be safe, take these seven steps:
4. Use Narrow Line Widths. Keep your line widths at 60 columns (i.e., 60 characters), roughly the width of this IP column. If you use lines that are wider than your readers screen widths (say, 70- or 80-columns wide), their software may cut the line off or it may wrap the excess around to form a short next line. Thus the appearance of your newsletter will be jagged for many viewers with alternating short and long lines. Sixty columns is a safe value for any software. 5. Use Hard Carriage Returns. This expression, a vestige of the typewriter era, means simply to press the enter key at the end of every line of text. This increases the odds that your 60-column lines will be reproduced accurately on your readers computer screens. At the risk of overwhelming you, let me suggest three ways to do this: 6. Understand the Importance of the Subject Line. Readers will not automatically open your E-mail newsletter. They make a decision about whether to open it based on your Subject line, just as newspaper readers decide whether to read an article based, in part, on its headline. However, unlike web users, newspaper readers have many cues to help them interpret a storys headline (e.g., pictures, captions, the headlines placement, for example, on the front page or in sports, the story itself, etc.). In contrastand with the exception of information in your From fieldan E-mail subject line stands alone, devoid of context. Thus you should: Use plain language and make the Subject line an ultra-short abstract of the associated newsletter (Nielsen, 1998). Consider using as your Subject line the primary benefit provided in the issue: Example: not Therapist as Coach-Vol.3, #10. But rather Seven Models of Virtual Coaching. Avoid using your newsletters title as the sole content of your Subject line. This is the most common mistake of newsletter publishers, making it impossible to know if the issue is of particular interest. And it makes it hard to locate specific issues if your reader has archived them in an E-mail mailbox. I suspect publishers of multi-section newsletters may feel this is their only choice. But its not. Such newsletters could use as their Subject line the major benefit in their lead story, the strategy used, for example, by the highly successful, daily newsletter, Jesse Bersts Anchor Desk (1999). Avoid cryptic, teasing, or humorous Subject lines. These are fairly typical mistakes for novice E-mail newsletter writers with Subject lines such as When in Utica (cryptic); The One Mistake to Avoid (a teaser); or The Sales Clerk as Babysitter (a teaser with attempted humor). Avoid acronyms and shorthand expressions that some readers may not understand. Do not use leading articles such as the or a (Nielsen, 1998). Instead, make the first word in the Subject line an important, content-laden word. Not An Introduction to Negotiating for Mid-Life Career Changers, but Negotiating Tips for Mid-Life Career Changers. 7. Be Succinct. To be safe, assume your e-readers will not print out your writing. Assume theyll read it directly from their computer monitors. Understand that web users read text 25 percent slower from a computer screen than from paper (Nielsen, 1997). This is probably due to the relatively poor resolution of computer monitorsonly 80 dpi (dots per inch) compared to 1200 dpi resolution for print of typeset quality. Further, users report that online reading is unpleasant when compared to reading print. Finally, many users approach their mountain of E-mail and their web browsing with an air of impatience. They want to move quickly. So be concise. Assume your e-readers will tolerate only half the text they would in print. Aim to make it 50 percent shorter than for comparable content on paper. 8. Write for Scannability. Web usage studies have consistently found users rarely readthey scan. They skim down their computer screens picking out initial sentences, subheads, and key words as they troll for useful information. So focus on making your newsletter easy to scan. This is second in importance only to writing useful content. To increase scanability, you should: Never, ever use large blocks of unparagraphed text. Rather, break large blocks of text into smaller chunks by using subheads; short paragraphs; frequent one-sentence paragraphs; occasional one- or two-word paragraphs; and numbered and bulleted lists. Use journalisms Inverted Pyramid. Simply stated, one should begin with the conclusion, then the important supporting information, and, finally, the background. (Nielsen, 1998). Use the inverted pyramid for the article itself and within each subhead as well. Most of us who have received our Ph.D.s are stuck in the traditional APA method of gradually presenting information until it has built to a culmination. In an E-mail format, however, it is more appropriate to begin with the summation. The reason this approach is popular for journalists is that the reader can stop at any point and still have understood the important points of the piece, which is exactly what you desire as well. This also increases the chance that scanners of your newsletter will find your most important points.
Capitalize the first letter of each word in the subhead. Although you can put subheads in all caps, its better not to. On the web, writing in all caps is perceived either as shouting or as unattractive. Underline the subhead. Even though in plain text one cannot use the underline function, you can create its analogue by putting a second line of dashes or some other character on the next line directly under the subhead. For example: Five Coaching Interventions .............................................. For even more emphasis, use plain text characters and white space above and below the subhead. In the example below, Im using the equal sign to provide the lines above and below the subhead: ===================== Five Coaching Interventions ===================== The arrangement of non-alphanumeric characters into pleasing borders is a minor art form that can be learned by observing skillful E-writing. I find some borders unattractive and noisy (e.g., the single use or most combinations of #, @, $, %, ^, &, +, *, <, or >) and others cleaner and more agreeable (e.g., the single use or some combinations of ~, _, -, and = .). Use numbers. Break long blocks of text into numbered points when they occur in serial order. You can increase scannability even more by using a subhead at the beginning of each point (as I have in this article). 9. Be Objective. Make your writing objective rather than promotional in style. Users distrust marketese. language that seems like promotional hype (Morkes and Nielsen, 1997). Writing in marketese is one of the most frequent mistakes made by commercial web sites and E-mail newsletters. This markedly reduces the perceived credibility of your writing. It also adds to the users cognitive burdenusers must scan more slowly, with more skepticism, doubly careful about the validity of the content. So be sparing with superlatives. As you edit, remove hyperbole, subjective claims, exaggeration, and boasting (even honest enthusiasm can be misperceived). Rarely use exclamation points. The bad news is that marketese is widespread on the web. The good news is that psychologists are trained to write with accuracy. By writing objectivelysometimes even understating our argumentsour writing often gains power and credibility. Summary If youre going to market your virtual coaching practice with an E-mail newsletter, its important to learn good, solid E-mail writing and formatting techniques. Your useful, accurate, clear information will increase market trust on a monthly basis, building your practice and helping real people. Resources Alertbox: Current Issues in Web Usability Dubbed by the New York Times as the guru of web usability (Richtel, 1998) and as one of the webs ten most influential people by web journalist, Jesse Berst (1998), Jakob Nielsen writes Alertbox, a helpful bi-weekly newsletter with an estimated 200,000 readers per month. This is a free newsletter available on the web at http://www.useit.com/alertbox/. All issues are archived. Highly recommended. Designing Websites with Authority: Secrets of an Information Architect Nielsens forthcoming book (due out in October, 1999) should be superb. While focused on web design, it will include and model tips on superior e-writing. Writing for the Web Crawford Killians book is a useful source of online writing tips (1999). Many, although not all, of his observations about the web translate to text-based E-mail newsletters. TextPad® TextPad® is a useful shareware word-processor which allows the user to easily set line length and make sure that hard carriage returns are inserted at the end of each line. It can be downloaded in trial version at http://www.textpad.com.
Say What You Mean on the Web This web site offers another good source for writing clearly and logically on the Web and is located at http://www.ronscheer.com/ References Berst, J. (1998). The webs 10 most influential people. Jesse Bersts Anchor Desk http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/story/story_2557.html/ Berst, J. (1999). Jesse Bersts Anchor Desk. (A free daily E-mail newsletter available on the web at http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/index.html/) Dean, B. (1999a) Marketing a virtual coaching practice on a national scale. The Independent Practitioner. 19 (3), 112-115. Dean, B. (1999b). The Therapist as Coach. (A free, monthly E-mail newsletter available on the web at http://www.mentorcoach.com/ or by calling 301-986-5688). Dean, B. (1999c). The All-But-Dissertation Survival Guide. (A free, monthly E-mail newsletter available on the web at http://www.ecoach.com/) Dillon, A. (1994). Designing usable electronic text: ergonomic aspects of human information usage. NY: Taylor and Francis. Kilian, C. (1999). Writing for the web. Bellingham, WA: Self-Counsel Press. Morkes, J., and Nielsen, J. (1997). Concise, scannable, and objective: how to write for the web. http://www.useit.com/papers/webwriting/writing.html/ Morkes, J., and Nielsen, J. (1998). Applying writing guidelines to the web. http://www.useit.com/papers/webwriting/rewriting.html/ Nielsen, J. (1997). Be succinct! (writing for the web). Alertbox: Current Issues in Web Usability. http://www.useit.com/alertbox/9703b.html/ Nielsen, J. (1998). Microcontent. Alertbox:Current Issues in Web Usability. http://www.useit.com/alertbox/980906.html/ Nielsen, J. (1999). Alertbox: Current Issues in Web Usability. (A free bi-weekly newsletter available on the web at http://www.useit.com/alertbox/) Nielsen, J. (Forthcoming). Designing websites with authority: Secrets of an information architect. NY: New Riders Publishing. Richtel, M. (1998, July 13). Making web sites more usable is former Sun Engineers goal. The New York Times. Shum, S. B. (1996). The missing link: Hypermedia usability research & the Web. http://kmi.open.ac.uk/~simonb/missing-link/ml-report.html Spool, J.M., Scanlon, T., Schroeder, W., Snyder, C., & DeAngelo, T. (1997). Web site usability: a designers guide. North Andover: MA: User Interface Engineering. Ben Dean, Ph.D. is a psychologist with a combined clinical and coaching practice in Bethesda, Maryland. He also owns MentorCoach®, a company that trains clinicians who are adding coaching as a practice specialty. He may be reached at 301-986-5688, ben@mentorcoach.com, or on the web at http://www.mentorcoach.com/. |
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