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Casual Articles - Tips on Using Constant Contact to Create Your Company Newsletter
7 Steps to Increasing Your Sales Power – Part 2 e, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up.Part 1 of this article identified the real secret to sales success and explored the first three steps to increasing your sales power. This article will walk you through the remaining four steps.Step #4: Trust yourselfObjective: Wake up, accept and learn to use the REAL power that comes from your connection to your heart, intuition and inner wisdom.It's amazing how many people really don't trust themselves. They have made SO many promises to themselves and ended up breaking them. After a while the mind just says, "Blah-blah-blah, here we go again."When this happens, your inner guidance system becomes weakened and eventually blocked...and with it a significant amount of your personal power. Your inner wisdom can put brilliant thoughts in your head and eloquent words on your tongue. But, if your mind is standing in the way, forget it.Here is another opportunity t "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You Affiliate Marketing Mistake - Not Buying The Product Or Using The Service If you run your own business like I do, you don’t have much time to spend fudging around with new programs. Here are some tricks I picked up while using Constant Contact's email marketing software to create my company newsletter.The most ironic thing that can happen in affiliate marketing business is that the affiliates themselves will be promoting the products that they do not even buy or use them. Most of them will only be thinking of that if I can promote to a lot of people through my affiliate link and it people buys, I will earn my commissions. In fact, not buying the product or using the service is the biggest mistakes that most affiliate marketer will make.As an affiliate, you main purpose is to effectively and convincingly promote a product or service to the customer so that they will buy. For you to be able to achieve this purpose, you must be able to relay to the customers that particular product and service. It is therefore difficult for you to do this when you yourself have not tried the product. Thus, you will not be able to promote and recommend them convincingly. You will also fail to create a desire in your custo First things first: gather up some subscribers! Before you do anything, place the subscriber sign-up box on your website, and anywhere else that your portfolio is displayed online. You can’t send out a newsletter if you have no subscribers! By the time you’re finished learning the Constant Contact ropes, you’ll have at the very least a handful of interested readers—but hopefully, more! Make your visitor sign-up form as simple as possible. You’ve already lucked out once because someone took time out of their busy day to pay attention to you. The worst thing you can possibly do now is make them work to become a subscriber. To simplify the process, go to Constant Contact's More Features section where you can "Customize Your Visitor Sign-Up Form." Other than their Name, Company Name and State, uncheck all the contact information boxes. You can always take down their information later, if they decide to become an actual client. Write and/or collect your articles ahead of time. If you’re a writer, you’ll hopefully have some decent material of your own on hand, saved onto your hard drive. If you don’t have any articles, now would be a good time to write some. Don’t type them directly into your newsletter from scratch. Navigating through an unfamiliar program is a big enough headache without trying to create error-free content. Use a word-processing program you’re familiar with, then save and store the files so your articles can be accessed easily, for this or any other project. If you’re not a writer and don’t intend to become one, go directly to Ezinearticles.com. This website showcases thousands of talented authors offering valuable tips. Many allow you to publish their work without even having to ask (although some require a quick permission request by email). Asking permission to use someone’s article is a great way to expand your circle of contacts! Once you’ve found the articles you’d like to feature, copy and paste the text into a file stored on your computer. Prepare your company logo in advance. Constant Contact allows you to "pop in" your logo and resize it to fit the page using their prescribed measurements. My logo is 300x180 pixels, but you can size yours to whatever specs you’d like. Save it as a .jpeg file and then upload it to your website. You’ll be accessing it from this URL later on. I decided that my masthead looked a lot cooler as part of my logo than in boring Arial type, so I designed the name of my publication “The Good Word: Wordfeeder.com’s Writing and Marketing Newsletter” right into the logo. With that in mind... Go ahead and break all the formatting rules. You don’t have to type the “suggested details” where Constant Contact indicates. If they offer a space for you to type your company newsletter name, but your name is already visible in your logo, just don’t type it into the box! If you don't like their "privacy policy" letter, write your own! Go on, break the rules. Delete that line where they ask for the date if you want. Don't add "helpful tips" like they suggest. You know you’re a rebel deep down. Set the Global Colors and Fonts before you create your articles (not after!). Your newsletter format should reflect the same style as your website. My font of choice is Arial, color 996600--Wordfeeder's signature Sienna brown. If you’re waffling around about point sizes and headline colors, use Article 1 as an experimental template. Type in some jibberish, and a bogus headline. Preview several times, playing around with font sizes until you’re satisfied with the whole look. Then preset your Global Colors and Fonts to match. When you’re ready to pop in your article, you can be sure it will be designed to your liking. Note: Global Color and Font changes don’t affect existing text. If you type your first article in Verdana and then make Arial your Global Font, guess what, your first article is still in Verdana. To save yourself a huge headache, set the colors and fonts BEFORE you enter your content. When entering article text, Control-A, Control-C and Control-V are your best friends. God willing, you already know that these keys stand for Highlight All, Copy and Paste. This is the quickest way to transfer an entire body of text from one file or program to another. Open the original file containing your article, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up. "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You Looking for a Business to Run in the New Revitalized Downtown Area? ecide to become an actual client.Looking for a place to add a Quick Lube away from your Super Wal-Mart Competitor? Down Town Revitalization, Why You Should Be Part of Such a Committee.A study showed that within the next five years 20% of LOF- Lube, Oil and Filter Independent Owners said they had plans on adding one or more facilities. So the question is where? You should be thinking on Location Strategies for Quick Lubes and Where Everyone Will Be Going. Right? Yes this is true. And we have talked about this trend lately. A good place to be is at either end of a down town revitalization district? Why? Well oil company brand names want to be in front of those customers just as much as you do.Also you can get incentives, tax breaks, quick loans from local banks in with the projects as well as free stuff like revitalization monies for retrofitting an old gas station or garage along with sidewalk benches, planters, signage upgrades, Write and/or collect your articles ahead of time. If you’re a writer, you’ll hopefully have some decent material of your own on hand, saved onto your hard drive. If you don’t have any articles, now would be a good time to write some. Don’t type them directly into your newsletter from scratch. Navigating through an unfamiliar program is a big enough headache without trying to create error-free content. Use a word-processing program you’re familiar with, then save and store the files so your articles can be accessed easily, for this or any other project. If you’re not a writer and don’t intend to become one, go directly to Ezinearticles.com. This website showcases thousands of talented authors offering valuable tips. Many allow you to publish their work without even having to ask (although some require a quick permission request by email). Asking permission to use someone’s article is a great way to expand your circle of contacts! Once you’ve found the articles you’d like to feature, copy and paste the text into a file stored on your computer. Prepare your company logo in advance. Constant Contact allows you to "pop in" your logo and resize it to fit the page using their prescribed measurements. My logo is 300x180 pixels, but you can size yours to whatever specs you’d like. Save it as a .jpeg file and then upload it to your website. You’ll be accessing it from this URL later on. I decided that my masthead looked a lot cooler as part of my logo than in boring Arial type, so I designed the name of my publication “The Good Word: Wordfeeder.com’s Writing and Marketing Newsletter” right into the logo. With that in mind... Go ahead and break all the formatting rules. You don’t have to type the “suggested details” where Constant Contact indicates. If they offer a space for you to type your company newsletter name, but your name is already visible in your logo, just don’t type it into the box! If you don't like their "privacy policy" letter, write your own! Go on, break the rules. Delete that line where they ask for the date if you want. Don't add "helpful tips" like they suggest. You know you’re a rebel deep down. Set the Global Colors and Fonts before you create your articles (not after!). Your newsletter format should reflect the same style as your website. My font of choice is Arial, color 996600--Wordfeeder's signature Sienna brown. If you’re waffling around about point sizes and headline colors, use Article 1 as an experimental template. Type in some jibberish, and a bogus headline. Preview several times, playing around with font sizes until you’re satisfied with the whole look. Then preset your Global Colors and Fonts to match. When you’re ready to pop in your article, you can be sure it will be designed to your liking. Note: Global Color and Font changes don’t affect existing text. If you type your first article in Verdana and then make Arial your Global Font, guess what, your first article is still in Verdana. To save yourself a huge headache, set the colors and fonts BEFORE you enter your content. When entering article text, Control-A, Control-C and Control-V are your best friends. God willing, you already know that these keys stand for Highlight All, Copy and Paste. This is the quickest way to transfer an entire body of text from one file or program to another. Open the original file containing your article, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up. "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You 10 Hot Jobs And The Certifications You Need To Get Them p>Constant Contact allows you to "pop in" your logo and resize it to fit the page using their prescribed measurements. My logo is 300x180 pixels, but you can size yours to whatever specs you’d like. Save it as a .jpeg file and then upload it to your website. You’ll be accessing it from this URL later on.While scouting for the top 10 hot jobs, we combed through tons of data offline as well online. Making a small list for just 10 hot jobs has taken some important considerations like the following ones:1. Longevity of relevance of the job 2. Salary and growth potential 3. Universality of the fieldWhile most job seekers looked for higher positions and salaries, others considered permanence of their job was their priority. It is noteworthy that the definition of job security has changed substantially in the last decade and it is all about continuing in the same job but under different employers. Ready? Here we go!10 Hot Jobs And The Certifications You Need To Get ThemThe top hot jobs were all of a high profile nature and most of them were in the field of computers.1. CISCO CERTIFIED NETWORK EXPERT: This hits the top for the second successive year. Candidates consider th I decided that my masthead looked a lot cooler as part of my logo than in boring Arial type, so I designed the name of my publication “The Good Word: Wordfeeder.com’s Writing and Marketing Newsletter” right into the logo. With that in mind... Go ahead and break all the formatting rules. You don’t have to type the “suggested details” where Constant Contact indicates. If they offer a space for you to type your company newsletter name, but your name is already visible in your logo, just don’t type it into the box! If you don't like their "privacy policy" letter, write your own! Go on, break the rules. Delete that line where they ask for the date if you want. Don't add "helpful tips" like they suggest. You know you’re a rebel deep down. Set the Global Colors and Fonts before you create your articles (not after!). Your newsletter format should reflect the same style as your website. My font of choice is Arial, color 996600--Wordfeeder's signature Sienna brown. If you’re waffling around about point sizes and headline colors, use Article 1 as an experimental template. Type in some jibberish, and a bogus headline. Preview several times, playing around with font sizes until you’re satisfied with the whole look. Then preset your Global Colors and Fonts to match. When you’re ready to pop in your article, you can be sure it will be designed to your liking. Note: Global Color and Font changes don’t affect existing text. If you type your first article in Verdana and then make Arial your Global Font, guess what, your first article is still in Verdana. To save yourself a huge headache, set the colors and fonts BEFORE you enter your content. When entering article text, Control-A, Control-C and Control-V are your best friends. God willing, you already know that these keys stand for Highlight All, Copy and Paste. This is the quickest way to transfer an entire body of text from one file or program to another. Open the original file containing your article, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up. "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You The Benefits of Reliable Equine Websites Your newsletter format should reflect the same style as your website. My font of choice is Arial, color 996600--Wordfeeder's signature Sienna brown. If you’re waffling around about point sizes and headline colors, use Article 1 as an experimental template. Type in some jibberish, and a bogus headline. Preview several times, playing around with font sizes until you’re satisfied with the whole look. Then preset your Global Colors and Fonts to match. When you’re ready to pop in your article, you can be sure it will be designed to your liking.When you are a horse passionate, horses become more than just a hobby for you! Horse enthusiasts dedicate a lot of time and money to their passion, constantly looking for new ways of exchanging information and tips with other horse lovers, striving to take their passion to another level. If you are a horse enthusiast and you want to quickly extend your knowledge on horses, with a minimal investment of time, effort and money, the Internet is the best place to turn to for help. There are various equine websites on the World Wide Web that offer you the opportunity to interact with other people interested in horses, allowing you to quickly access the information you need in a fun and interesting environment.Reliable equine websites offer members the chance to chat with other horse owners and lovers in a wide range of horse forums. Horse forums are the best means to quickly receive advice regarding horse bree Note: Global Color and Font changes don’t affect existing text. If you type your first article in Verdana and then make Arial your Global Font, guess what, your first article is still in Verdana. To save yourself a huge headache, set the colors and fonts BEFORE you enter your content. When entering article text, Control-A, Control-C and Control-V are your best friends. God willing, you already know that these keys stand for Highlight All, Copy and Paste. This is the quickest way to transfer an entire body of text from one file or program to another. Open the original file containing your article, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up. "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You How to Convey Trustworthiness in Direct Mail Marketing Sales Letter e, hit the Control-A and Control-C keys in succession. Your text will be highlighted, and then stored in your computer’s memory. Now go to Paragraph 1 of your Contant Contact Article template, and do a Control-V. The entire article will flow into the box. Use your down-arrow key to move down the article body and insert html paragraph breaks between each paragraph. Use your Preview screen to make sure everything’s lining up.A person or business that might buy from you is called a prospect. But they might just as accurately be called a skeptic. We live in the age of the spam filter. And call-display. We live in what fellow-copywriter Herschell Gordon Lewis calls, “The Age of Skepticism.”Your sales letters must overcome your reader’s built-in baloney detector. Your prospective customers are on their guard. Here, in no particular order, are some tips on how to prove your trustworthiness on paper.1. Third-party endorsementsIf your product has won an industry award for innovation, say so. If your service was ranked among the top 10 in your industry by a trade publication or other impartial group, mention that. Leverage the positive press you’ve received.2. TestimonialsIf your clients have said kind things about your company, your products or your customer service, cit "But wait!" you say. "Constant Contact’s article format shows one box per paragraph. That means they want me to copy each paragraph at a time into each box." Pah! Constant Contact doesn't care how you create your newsletter. They just want you to sign up for their software. If you really want to, you can copy in each paragraph at a time, but I wouldn't recommend it. Just fill in those paragraph breaks, and the pain of creating a newsletter will be over before you know it. Add images by uploading photos to your website and then pasting the URL into the Constant Contact format. This is an arduous process, and you may not care enough to include pictures, but I like my newsletter to look jazzy, so I use them. You can search for royalty-free images on www.picturequest.com, or you can get photos from another source if you have one. Select images that pertain to your content. For example, I found a picture of a turtle to use with an article about Slow Days at Work. It’s up to you how much time you spend on the aesthetics of your emailed newsletter, but I for one appreciate a quality presention so I would say, go all out! Use the Quicklinks as an opportunity for free advertising. Once again, I recommend deviating from the newsletter template. You can link to anything you want here; a selection of product you sell, the writing or design samples of your website, or even the website of a friend or business partner. Don’t create a brand new newsletter campaign from scratch each time you want to mail your subscribers. The “Copy Campaign” button is an incredibly handy tool that duplicates a newsletter you’ve already completed and sent. All you have to do is change the name of the campaign, and replace the former articles, headlines and photos with new ones. So if you had some trouble getting your first newsletter in order, breathe easy. You’ll never have to worry about it again. Just take care to update all of the information so you don’t accidently send dupes of articles you ran last month! Constant Contact is a bit tricky at first, but with a little patience, you, too can have your own email newsletter up and running in no time. Copyright 2005 Dina Giolitto. All rights reserved.
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