Marketers know the value of publishing a newsletter to reach prospects and customers. But there's a lot of prep work involved in any publishing venture, no matter how humble or ambitious.

From content preparation to coding to delivery, a lot goes on behind the scenes in newsletter publishing. A newsletter's design code, in particular, can greatly affect how the newsletter appears and where it gets sent (to spam neverland or to the intended inbox). This code can greatly influence the effectiveness of a newsletter.

Many businesses use Web development tools and online Web applications that spit out code. Few do it from scratch, writing HTML by hand. What approaches or steps do newsletter publishers need to follow to ensure the newsletter makes it all the way to recipients' inboxes?

What questions do you have to guarantee 2005 is a success for your business? We hope your problems are small, like accidentally writing 2004 on your checks. But if they're bigger than that, 200,000 "MarketingProfs Today" readers can provide ideas you may not consider when working on your issue. Present your marketing challenge and receive a complimentary copy of our book, A Marketer's Guide to e-Newsletter Publishing.

This Week's Dilemma

Creating effective newsletters, code and all

We create our HTML-based emails in-house using Macromedia's Dreamweaver. Then we take the code from Dreamweaver and send it to third-party channels to distribute to their opt-in lists that are specifically interested in our product. We watch the words we use that tend to send emails to the junk folders. Dreamweaver is one of the better programs in creating clean code. However, in terms of newsletters, I am not sure that using Dreamweaver is the most effective in avoiding the junk folders. What is the best approach to ensure newsletter code is effective in reaching recipients' inboxes?

—Alia, Marketing Campaign Manager

Previous Dilemma

Marketing wonderland during the holiday season

The end of the year is a popular time for shopping. However, we're not a retailer, nor do we have a bricks-and-mortar store. We're a business that provides services and sells a Web-based application. How can a business like mine cash in on this time of the year, when shopping is big and businesses make last-minute tax-deductible purchases?

—Brooklyn, Director of Marketing

Summary of Advice Received

The holiday season is over, but the advice we have received from readers is applicable throughout the year, especially for other holidays. The following ideas are ways to cash in on holidays and special events:

  1. Tie promotions in with the holiday season.
  2. Use the Web as a distribution channel.
  3. Conduct a pilot project.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hank Stroll (Hank@InternetVIZ.com) is publisher at InternetVIZ, a custom publisher of 24 B2B e-newsletters reaching 490,000 business executives.