While many new e-magazine publishers are anxious to develop good content for their e-magazines, many of them seem to be having more trouble deciding on the timeline and sticking to it!
The beast that tamed the timetable from the beginning was very clever. Here are some tips to help you.
- Think about how much time you want to spend on an e-magazine. For your initial phase, if you are developing your own content, plan at least five hours to develop each question. This includes research, writing, formatting, proofreading, and publishing time. This estimate is for an electronic magazine with only one article. If you are writing multiple articles, please plan to allow more time or post articles from guest authors.
- Start with a conservative schedule. When you plan an e-magazine, you may be excited and full of ideas that you want to publish as often as possible. stop! Your enthusiasm is admirable, but it starts every month. When you are sure you can handle the frequency, you can increase the frequency at any time. A few years ago, I was excited to start my first e-magazine as a weekly performance, and then whenever I was going to write, I would immediately be jealous. Now that I have support staff, I have scheduled my schedule every two weeks [every two weeks].
- Even if you can stand it, don't post it every day. Yes, that's right. You want to be your potential customer & mind, but not every day on their faces. We have received a lot of emails! Even if you write an extraordinary letter, it is best to let the reader want more. I was on the list of a very good daily e-magazine recently, but I can't keep up with it every day. I was very guilty of seeing unread questions in my email inbox, so I ended up calling my subscription. If you want your e-magazine to be happy to expect and read, I recommend that you publish it no more than once or twice a week.
- Choose the best day for your readers...like you Many sales experts say that people are most likely to hear the opinions of marketers on Tuesday. So why not let your e-magazine reach your readers? What about email inbox? According to other sales professionals, other good days are Wednesday and Thursday. However, I ignored it and released it on Friday, just because it was my favorite day. ; ]
- Once you have set your schedule, stick to it! Developing a timeline will show the reader that you are well organized and can complete the task on time. No matter how busy you are, sending your e-magazines at will seems to be both fragile and unprofessional. Now, we are all human, holiday, sick, busy. So what do you do when you can't solve this new problem? Rerun. You have received good feedback by choosing a past question more than six months ago. Republishing its content is a bit like "Hey guys, now I am drinking a drink on the beach in Bali, so according to the public's request, here replayed one of our best articles., insightful content!" Of course, If you are really on vacation, you will only say something similar - people do know that you will take time. Otherwise, never share your schedule or be too busy to write a story - this will tell your readers that they are on your list at the end. If you have to, please tell me the truth and say that you attend meetings, travel, etc.
- Try to complete one or two questions ahead of time and you can immediately send a notification. This is great for an era when an emergency occurs or when you are too drowning to write a new problem. The next time you get some ideas [and they don't seem to appear multiple times?], you will be excited and get rid of a few. You can edit them at any time - just move your thoughts from your mind to the screen. [The secret reminder of the essay queen: Need some extra inspiration? Try whipping a fresh Margarita - every time for me! Make sure to check out later; ;]]
- For low maintenance e-magazines, please be careful! Who said you need to write in-depth articles? Everyone's time is short, so readers like quick tips. When you are close to the deadline, the tips are easy to put together, which means you are more likely to do as planned. So if you're on time, please post a simple monthly or weekly reminder instead of a detailed article.
[c] 2000-2003 Alexandria K. Brown. all rights reserved.
Orignal From: Sticky issue of e-magazine timeline
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