I Want A List Of 100 Email
Subscribers
How do you define quality content?
It is relatively easy to do. You just need to add value to the
reader and this is the first important point. After reading your
material or watching your video, they should have learned something
new or learned something they couldn’t before.
Think about these two key factors for quality content:
Your content should add value to your reader.
Your content should be relevant to the niche in which you
operate.
You have to create a content plan.
Determine how often you post new content each week or month,
and create a playlist for content you think will add value. A plan
always works better than making it in the blink of an eye. With a
plan, you never get lost in ideas because you’ve already decided what
your content is about.
To create your mailing list:-
1. Content Update
The concept of a content update is simple: you offer your
audience an “improved” or significantly improved version of
a blog post in exchange for their email address.
You won’t believe how many success stories there are with this
simple yet effective method.
2. Relevant form
As long as you don’t annoy your website visitors too much, a
pop-up form is very useful for collecting email addresses. You can
set up one to display the form when a visitor’s cursor action
indicates that they are about to leave your site. lust, isn’t it?
First 100 email subscribers: Pop-up
Make it easy for the prospect to enter their email address and
don’t ask for more details. All you really need is your email
address.
This is a “slow” technique that you should definitely
try if your goal is to get more views and attention. Remember, if a
pop-up is unrelated to valuable data or you don’t share content
updates, you need to demonstrate the benefit of providing an email
address to viewers.
3. Participation Boxes
Almost every company website or blog has a subscription field
for entering email addresses. It’s usually best to place this field
on every page of a website, which encourages visitors to log in only.
In fact, it is possible to place activation boxes in almost
every corner of your blog or page. Some of the top performing spots
can be found at the bottom of the blog post, at the top of the
website, or in the description of your videos/pictures.
You can also share your registration or membership form on your
social media accounts. Promotional tweets and magazines are
essential, so familiarize yourself with social media planning tools
if you haven’t already.
4. Special Gifts
For many website visitors, all they need is the temptation to
subscribe to their mailing list and provide their personal
information. This means that you need to offer a real reward or
benefit for being “loyal” to your current and potential
customers.
This can take the form of limited offers, such as free product
samples for the first 100 customers. You can also offer customers
promotional discounts or free shipping when selling something online.
Do the research and see the most effective types of gifts for
getting email addresses. Actionable free gifts are a great way to
engage people without making them feel cheated.
Some actionable freebies include checklists, calendars,
planners, video tutorials, ebooks, and workbooks. These are useful
to your readers, but practically free to you.
Another option is to offer a free course via email. For
example, a psychology-based blog might have an introductory course
that gives email subscribers a course update approximately every two
weeks.
Speaking of psychology, switching up your gifts frequently will
keep your readers interested. Also, if a deal expires sooner, they
are more likely to profit from it.
5. Bonus Offers
Most websites have a weekly newsletter for those who subscribe.
However, many people make the mistake of just inserting and
submitting their latest blog post.
Make your newsletters fun and unique, to save people the
boredom of unsubscribing! You want it to satisfy itself and not just
a compilation of existing material. Write a smart introduction and
thank your followers for their stay by offering discounts or offers
that aren’t available anywhere else.
First 100 Email Subscribers – 50% OFF
Make them informative, not just infomercials. Fill your email
newsletters with additional content as well as secret promotional
offers or product information so that your readers feel special and
privileged.
All of this, of course, increases your engagement with the
people who actually drive your blog.
6. Reception Gate
Mixerzy’s Andrew Warner managed to create an attractive front
door for generating email subscriptions that pop up whenever someone
visits their website. This feature is typically only visible to new
visitors, which means they don’t care even if they don’t actually
want to subscribe.
First 100 Email Subscribers – Welcome
This is a type of message asking viewers to sign in with their
email address. There are tools you can use to move this to the
sidebar of your site so that it is still available when visitors hit
the close button for the first time.
If you use a WordPress blog, Aweber and GetResponse and many
other autoresponder systems have widgets that you can use to drag,
drag, and drop a form onto your sidebar.
The great thing about HomeGet is that as a cross between a
pop-up form and a login box, it is one of the best converting list
building techniques.
7. Landing Page
Landing pages are mentioned almost everywhere in relation to
mailing lists. Basically, these are pages that encourage the reader
to sign up or direct them to a page that does so.
Why is a mailing list important?
As you build your list, the first thing you can do is to
continuously monetize it by offering products and services.
If you have an e-commerce store, email marketing is essential
to increase sales and conversions.
For businesses built on digital products, email marketing has
been the key to monetization.
Second, email is the only way people can return to your website
regularly, even if you don’t want to sell a product. For example, if
you have a blog, every time you post a new post, you can notify your
list and drive recurring traffic to your site.
Third, privatization and trust building. You can connect with
your audience in creative and personalized ways that Tweets or
Facebook posts simply can’t.
In the end, the most important thing is that you own your list.
You do not own your Facebook page or Instagram followers.
Take for example the case of MySpace. The effort and time
spent creating your MySpace account is decreasing as new social media
platforms emerge and people migrate to other platforms.
When Facebook or Instagram wants to close your account, your
followers will join you.
If Pinterest or Twitter changes their policies, even if you
have 1 million followers, you probably won’t be able to influence it.
But you own your mailing list. Your customers are part of your
clan and you have given you a holy place in your mailbox to contact
them.
If you can gain and nurture followers, they can become your most
loyal followers and customers. Check out the traffic and lead
generation strategies I used to grow my email list to 5,000
subscribers.
Respectfully
Vasile,