Innovative E-newsletter E-mails
Over the past couple of months, I’ve signed up for numerous organizations’ e-newsletters seeking innovators and strategic thinkers who look at an e-newsletter as more than a condensed version of their home pages. Here are some of my favorites and the reasons I chose them.
Doctors Without Borders: Get Your Tickets Today! Living in Emergency, Dec. 14
Visually Interesting: Besides the giant picture that tells you exactly what the rest of the e-mail is going to be about, there’s also a video of the trailer to the movie promoted within the body of the email.
To the Point: Informs the reader exactly why the organization is e-mailing her and what action she is being asked to take without expecting her to read a novel. The copy is well thought-out. All the questions a reader could have about how to see this movie are answered. There is no space wasted on irrelevant information distracting from the main message.
Shareability: Twitter and Facebook Connect are used at the end of this e-mail so those who want to attend this event, but are a little timid going to a movie alone, easily can post the event to their Facebook profiles and invite friends to join in — an excellent way to incorporate social media into e-mail. E-mail always will be a critical factor in online fundraising, and social media also will be a means of communicating a message. Bringing those two together is the opportunity for innovation, testing and creativity.
charity: water: Jingle Wells
Visually Interesting: In this e-mail, less was more — simple color scheme, simple layout and easy to read. It was refreshing to be able to focus on the message being conveyed, (in an interesting way), rather than the more than 100 or so e-mails I’ve reviewed that were crammed with copy, colors, fonts and thumbnails in an attempt to draw my attention by any means possible. It was the unique simplicity of charity: water's approach that made it stand out.