Email Newsletter Software

Title: Email Newsletter Software

Author: Robert F. Abbott

Summary: What software should you use when you start an email
newsletter?
Should you use a word processing program or email program to compose
it? And
which email program would be best?

Keywords: email, e-mail, email newsletter software, create email
newsletter, newsletter, email programs, word processors, Abbott

Author Email: robert@abbottletter.com

Author photo: http://www.managersguide.com/images/r-abbott.jpg

Web location: http://www.communication-newsletter.com/software.html

Length: 638 words (including byline)




Email Newsletter Software

By: Robert F. Abbott

What software do I need? Should I create my newsletter in a
word processor or email program? Which email program should I
use?

Those questions came from a visitor to the Manager's Guide to
Newsletters website. She planned to start an email newsletter
that would go to parents of students at her school and wanted
to know about the software she would need.

In response, we'll look at these important questions for
newsletter publishers.

Word processor or email program? This can be one of the
simpler issues, at least if your mailing list is not too large
at start-up. You can write your newsletter in any email
program, or any word processor that allows you to save your
work as plain text (ASCII). Most writers prefer to use a word
processing program for at least the first draft, since it
provides more text manipulation features and saving options.

Once you've written, rewritten, spellchecked, and proofread
your newsletter in the word processor, copy and paste it into
the body of your email program (we'll discuss how to handle
that text in the next article in this series).

Of course, you'll need an email program of some kind to send
out your newsletter, regardless of where you wrote it. Among
email programs, check both those stand-alone programs and
those integrated with browsers.

The most common program is Outlook Express, which comes
bundled with Internet Explorer, and that in turn comes bundled
with Windows. But, don't overlook the possibilities in the
Netscape and Opera suites. In addition, there's also a new
challenger, Mozilla Thunderbird, which is associated with the
Firefox browser.

Turning to stand-alone email programs, take a look at Eudora
(which offers an advertising-supported version and a version
you can buy). It has a solid reputation among many email
newsletter publishers, and I consider it the best all-purpose
email client for my PC (however, I don't like it on my Mac,
where I use the built-in program, Mail).

I've used all of these programs at one time or another, and
each has advantages and disadvantages. In considering them,
review the strengths and weaknesses of their address books as
well as their message composition capabilities.

Once your mailing list grows beyond a certain point (depending
on your personal inclinations), you'll need to move it out of
the email program and into something more flexible.

In my case, once the list got to something like a hundred
subscribers, I found the management of it frustrating. For
example, adding and deleting email addresses from an email
program takes more time and trouble than doing it in a word
processing program or, on a more sophisticated level again, a
database program.

In managing a list of several thousand, I use the Find feature
to quickly pick out and delete someone who wants to
unsubscribe. Similarly, it's easy to get the list back into
alphabetical order at any time by using the sorting feature of
a word processing program.

Another growth issue: As your subscriber list grows, you may
want to move away from your email program and use an
independent mailing service. In that case, you go to a
provider company and upload your list one time. After that,
you simply paste your newsletter into a form they provide, and
click the Send button. Then, the service sends out your email
using its servers.

But, to get started you need only an email program, and you
have many free and worthwhile options. Try each one out for an
issue or two of your newsletter, to find what suits you.

Robert F. Abbott, the author of A Manager's Guide to
Newsletters: Communicating for Results, writes and publishes
Abbott's Communication Letter. Read more articles about
Internet communication, as well as email and printed
newsletters at:
http://www.communication-newsletter.com/ic.html



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