Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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4 Ways the Email Newsletter Is Making News Better

4 Ways the Email Newsletter Is Making News Better | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The sheer amount of Internet content—true or not—is one of the reasons 62 percent of people use social media as a news source, but it’s also part of why more discerning audiences are retreating to the humble email newsletter.

 

While the post-election surge of interest in reputable journalism led to subscription surges at many major publishers, it also leaves readers with an overabundance of news.

 

People want real news but need it fast, and newsletters provide the convenience of Facebook with less noise.

 

Meanwhile, the email newsletters publishers have long relied on to boost engagement and ROI are now being recognized as a means to hold onto these new subscribers. Though derided and routinely declared dead, email remains a favorite of audiences and publishers alike simply by playing to its strengths: delivering easily-digestible content that increases traffic....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The email newsletter may have a new life as a trusted source for "real" news as well as a filter for all the news and social media "noise" around us. Of course, it could also be used for fake news too.

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How TinyLetter Is Making Us Fall In Love With Email Again

How TinyLetter Is Making Us Fall In Love With Email Again | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Thanks to TinyLetter and the demise of Google Reader we're all emailing like it's 1999...


...TinyLetter is to MailChimp what Tumblr is to WordPress: It's newsletters for dummies. "I think my mom could use TinyLetter," claims Kiefer Lee. Unlike MailChimp, which caters to businesses and offers all sorts of testing and analytics features, TinyLetter provides just the basics. Writing a message is just like writing an email in Gmail, meaning the process takes only as long as crafting the body text.


Getting people to subscribe to letters is just as easy. TinyLetter provides an embed code for those who want to put a box on their website. Or interested readers can head straight to a letter's TinyLetters landing page, which consists of a short description, a place to subscribe, and a link to previous messages, all against one big, bold, and beautiful image.


Oh, and unlike MailChimp, it's free. The service does have a limit on subscribers to a given newsletter, but the company works with very popular mailers on that....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Good look at a useful newsletter and email tool called TinyLetter. Worth exploring.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, November 19, 2013 2:47 AM

A cool newsletter tool worth exploring.