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Email Marketing May Not be Sexy But it Works: Ashley Guttuso image

Email Marketing May Not be Sexy But it Works: Ashley Guttuso

Marketing Spark (The B2B SaaS Marketing Podcast)
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63 Plays4 years ago

In some respects, newsletters are the Rodney Dangerfield of the digital marketing world; they get no respect.

They’re widely used by B2B companies to engage and convert customers but they’re not seen as sexy. 

To get some insight into the world of newsletters, I saw down with Ashley Guttuso, Director of Marketing at Simple Focus Software and the author of the Opt-in Weekly newsletter. 

We talked about:

- Best practices and mistakes to avoid

- HubSpot's acquisition of The Hustle

- How and when to use curated content within newsletters.

Recommended
Transcript

Introduction to Marketing Spark Podcast

00:00:01
Speaker
You're listening to Marketing Spark, the podcast that delivers insight, tools, and tips for marketers and entrepreneurs in the trenches in 25 minutes or less.

Are newsletters underrated in digital marketing?

00:00:11
Speaker
In some respects, newsletters are the Rodney Dangerfield of the digital marketing world. They get no respect. They're widely used by B2B companies to engage and convert customers, but they're not seen as sexy.

Meet Ashley Katusa, Email Marketing Expert

00:00:24
Speaker
To get some insight into the world of newsletters, I'm talking to Ashley Katusa, Director of Marketing at Simple Focus Software and the author of the Opt-In Weekly newsletter. Welcome to Marketing Sparking.
00:00:39
Speaker
It's great to have you and we've been going back and forth on LinkedIn for a while and I've yet to actually talk to someone on my podcast about newsletters. So I'm really excited about the opportunity to get

The Power of Email in Conversions

00:00:51
Speaker
into it with you. I'm excited too. I think this is a fun topic because so many people like to proclaim that email is dead. Then they realize that email is responsible for a high percentage of conversions and of something that's almost more important.
00:01:07
Speaker
is in nurturing relationships. So I've had a lot of interesting conversations in the past six, eight months with different newsletter editors, a percentage of whom are marketers who have had a lot of success with their newsletters, but it's because they are doing it in a different way than like a lot of times there's a best practice, right? Send a weekly newsletter or send a monthly newsletter. And then that best practice gets like

The Rise of Editorial-style Newsletters

00:01:36
Speaker
twisted and soiled and it turns into something less savory than it once was. The newsletter actually takes on this new definition and it's email asking someone to convert. You do the opposite of that with Marketing Spark.
00:01:53
Speaker
I think that's how we connected in the first place but the marketers who are doing this well are trading their newsletter like it is an editorial style newsletter which i love cuz my background is in journalism and we've seen this shift or the beginnings of a shift that will just become more prevalent from
00:02:14
Speaker
marketing teams like embracing content marketing, making sure that you have content up there that engages, to re-engineering your mindset or your team's structure to perform the way a newsroom or a media group performs. And so the focus then becomes on providing content, whether you're writing it or curating it,

Why are newsletters effective yet underestimated?

00:02:39
Speaker
that its sole intention is to support your audience and their success. So the marketers who do this best, I think, are the ones who are putting informative educational content in front of their readership and then sprinkling in almost like an 80-20 or 90-10% ratio of editorial to promotional. So that's the trend that I'm seeing.
00:03:07
Speaker
So I know you're going to give me the opposite answer, but are newsletters unglamorous or are they simply understated or are they misunderstood? Because I think the reality is that newsletters have been around for a long time. As marketers, we probably take them for granted because they're part of our arsenals, just like
00:03:28
Speaker
a blog or a website or social media. Maybe we start to dismiss the effectiveness of the newsletter or the fact that newsletters can be sexy.

Scaling Personal Communication with Email

00:03:38
Speaker
They can be compelling and engaging. Yes. They have this stigma, I suppose you could call it, of being kind of old hat because they're not a new tactic. But if you think about marketing
00:03:51
Speaker
And its primary goal is to create awareness and then take that awareness and form a relationship, a connection between the brand and the consumer. Then it's a wonderful vehicle to deliver that intimate message because email takes one to one, me to you. I'm sending this email to you.
00:04:17
Speaker
and scales it as a one to many as long as you don't treat it like it's one to many. You kind of have to use the content in a way where I'm sending this specifically to you, my target ICP. Yes, they don't seem to be as sexy.
00:04:35
Speaker
Every five or ten years, they have another resurgence and they're the new great thing

HubSpot & The Hustle: B2B Strategy Analysis

00:04:41
Speaker
to do. And I think that you would find that that's why HubSpot just bought The Hustle or why Business Insider thought Morning Brew was a great acquisition. Those newsletters, their editors had created an audience and a relationship with that audience that they hope to take advantage of.
00:05:02
Speaker
I'm glad you mentioned that because when HubSpot bought the Hustle, my first impression was that it was more like, what? Why would a software company buy a popular newsletter? And I didn't really see the connection between the two because HubSpot is enterprise software and the Hustle is all over the place. Their content is compelling and engaging.
00:05:23
Speaker
and really interesting. In fact, it's really good journalism when you think about it. So why do you think HubSpot made the move? And then more important, what does that suggest as a trend in terms of future acquisitions or software companies, B2B software companies buying newsletters? Is this the tip of the iceberg as far as you're concerned? I think that their approach is the fast-paced way to reach an audience that has already been nurtured into its existing state.
00:05:53
Speaker
Their challenge will be to keep the content the same as it is, but to work the HubSpot brand into it, right? Because the Hustle has like a community. It's built around a mindset. And so what it's also doing is fueling a lot of business ideas and keeping people tuned in to the state of an industry.
00:06:21
Speaker
they're interested in. So HubSpot's challenge and any challenge to a marketing
00:06:27
Speaker
a team that is trying to act like a media company is to not twist what a media company does into promo, promo, promo. They have to deliver information in the way that the audience wants to receive it. So you can do that from scratch, or if you're funded, you can go buy the exact newsletter
00:06:54
Speaker
that has been growing for years and has the audience you want to reach. But the trick is not to like, we one time we bought a house that was built in 1823.
00:07:05
Speaker
and it had like a servant staircase off the kitchen that was a winder staircase, and we wanted it on the National Historic Register, right? But the second you go in, if you are contemplating like, hey, we should get rid of that staircase to make the kitchen bigger, you start to hurt the architectural integrity, and then you are no longer eligible for the
00:07:28
Speaker
tax benefits of being on the National Register because you have now harmed the architectural integrity. If you take that metaphor and you adapt it to editorial newsletter that a SaaS company has acquired, that's their challenge, is not to disrupt or harm the integrity of the publication.
00:07:50
Speaker
I have two schools of thought when it comes to HubSpot. One is that it's going to be very hard for HubSpot to keep its hands off the hustle because you know that they're going to want to somehow imprint their brand and their brand message into that media entity. But on the other hand, HubSpot has a reputation of creating reams of value added insightful content that
00:08:17
Speaker
They don't even expect a lot of the readers even buy how spot going down the road so that it's sort of a two headed beast. When you think about how has been operates but i think you're right i think it's gonna be extremely tempting for hotspot to try to insert itself into the hustle conversation my advice to have a spot would be to back off let the hustle.
00:08:36
Speaker
stay the hustle, use a really light touch as you go forward, and then you'll be able to reap the benefits and then start to win over the community. Because if they go too fast or they make too big moves, then the community will push back. Right. So the intention would be to serve the existing audience, not change things in a way that
00:08:58
Speaker
makes them no longer want to be in that audience because that's newsletter subscriptions, right? It hits your inbox too many times with messaging that you don't like. There's this magic unsubscribe and poof, it's no longer part of your daily or weekly reading session. So I liked that from the press release, they expressed an intention to preserve that integrity and that delivery methodology.
00:09:27
Speaker
I am going to watch and see. I think we all are and see how they treat that.

Trends and Strategies in B2B Newsletters

00:09:33
Speaker
And then there's can be lessons learned for the rest of us as we watch things unfold, right?
00:09:42
Speaker
Now you mentioned something earlier about email going in sort of waves, maybe every five years or every 10 years, something gets new and interesting. So I'm interested given what's happened with the hustle on HubSpot and given what we've seen last year, as far as sort of this new digital marketing landscape, the fact that we're not going to conferences, what's the state of the, of newsletters within this marketing landscape?
00:10:06
Speaker
Do you see changes? Do you see trends happening? Do you see the way that companies, B2B companies are using newsletters changes? Yes. Okay. So I want to bring up two things. Number one, I think a lot of marketing teams are looking at their newsletter that they have just been a cycle of sending because they've always sent and starting to think, Oh, how can I overhaul this to be more, it,
00:10:30
Speaker
more user-centric, right? How can what I send really help the recipient and earn me that next contract renewal in the process? So it becomes a part of a success strategy, especially with SaaS, if you're subscribed to their newsletter and you're subscribed to their software.
00:10:53
Speaker
But then another thing that I have seen

Niche Newsletters: Industry Bridges

00:10:55
Speaker
is independent newsletters like Morning Brew, like The Hustle, a lot of these smaller independent newsletters that are really niched down to a topic or industry that a company would be interested in advertising to.
00:11:15
Speaker
those newsletters are getting advertisements from big companies. So it's a two-sided play. I've seen Ahrefs advertising in small SEO niche newsletters. So there's kind of a myriad of opportunities. And I think we will see a lot of affiliate things going on and that we will see marketing teams upgrading their newsletter or
00:11:42
Speaker
rethinking the content strategy and trying to figure out how to make it different. I think you and I talked about a long time ago, and this is applicable probably with the hustle as well as any other niche industry newsletter, is that if your marketing team is
00:12:00
Speaker
Let's say you don't have the bandwidth even to write a blog a week or a blog a day about industry best practices or trends or things that are going on in your ICP's world, but if you are daily
00:12:19
Speaker
immersing in that ICP's world by collecting links and reading the stories they should be reading, you are more, even if you don't publish that as a newsletter, you are more in tune with who you are trying to sell to.
00:12:34
Speaker
one of the things i want to talk to you about is just an editorial approach to uh the editorial approach to newsletters so there are some newsletters that are opinion pieces or insight and there are others that are simply curated content do you have a preference is it depending on the audience i'm just curious about how

Balancing Content: Original, Curated, or Hybrid?

00:12:54
Speaker
companies and individuals should, well have B2B companies should approach a newsletter because you want to serve your audience, you want to give them relevant content, but you also want to engage, attract, convert. So how do you, what's the balancing act in terms of the best editorial approach? So I think you could be successful with many models, right? You could have a pure curation model. You could have a pure, this is the message from the CEO once a week, once a month, fortnightly, whatever.
00:13:24
Speaker
Or you could have a hybrid model that uses original content, a lot of context for the links you're bringing in. I think that's kind of what you do. I would call that a hybrid.
00:13:38
Speaker
I guess I was wondering whether companies should simply provide insight and their own opinions and their own views of the world, or whether they should also bring in curated content, third party content that serves the needs and interests of their customers, and then how do you fit in that whole conversion exercise that you

Understanding Audience and Newsletter Mistakes

00:14:00
Speaker
wanna have? I think we do both. I think the mix is my favorite approach, but I think before I say go do both,
00:14:06
Speaker
What I should really say is go research your ICP. What do they read? What do they like to read? And then figure out how to not just copycat that. Because if I already get a curated newsletter about
00:14:21
Speaker
content strategy or SEO. I don't want five of those. And so I feel like it's appropriate right now to mention that I just finished Marcus Andrews narrative design course over on product marketing Alliance. And it's phenomenal. I'll give him that plug. But what the message that he drives home is that there's so much noise.
00:14:51
Speaker
There is so much noise in the world and your ICP can only consume so much. So you need to figure out how to define what it means to win in their industry and then to give that game a name.
00:15:12
Speaker
And then for that new game, that new playbook to be a part of your marketing and I think it's a part of your newsletter, right? And so I wrote just today or I published just today that like you can't be one of 40 newsletters that is sending out the same links and expect to win. You've got to carve out a spot for yourself and figure out like not just how to be like what they like, but how to deliver
00:15:42
Speaker
a way for them to win and give that parentheses or context or book bookends. Make own that and then bring that into your newsletter so that it's not just another newsletter that's like other newsletters, but it is the one I can't live without because I depend on it to win in my workplace or in my life.
00:16:07
Speaker
I can totally see where you're coming from because when I look at my own consumption of newsletters and like you, I subscribe to a lot of newsletters, Morning Brew, Marketing Brew are the ones that I look forward to. The click is another one that I really like. As a marketer, I want you to bring me unique, interesting, compelling content that I wouldn't find elsewhere and you bring it all to me and that's what makes the value of a newsletter. So we've talked about
00:16:33
Speaker
good practices, best practices for newsletters, but maybe we can flip things on their head and talk about the mistakes that companies make with newsletters. I would suspect that the biggest culprit is they try to be too conversion focused or product focused. So from your perspective, and you look at a lot of newsletters and talk to a lot of newsletter
00:16:53
Speaker
creators. What are the big mistakes that B2B companies should have? Too much promotional content, not enough editorial. And the reason I say flip this and make this like 90 10 or at the worst 80 20 is that you use the editorial content to earn the right to be promotional. And you are likely not just sending a newsletter, you might also be sending promotional like
00:17:24
Speaker
only newsletter. I mean, not newsletters, but emails, right? So you may have an e-blast or a series when you're launching a product or something that you're doing. So if you are doing that in addition to your newsletter, the newsletter and its on repeat quality delivery of things they always want is the thing that will keep them less annoyed
00:17:49
Speaker
by the promotional blasts, right? When you start like launching or you have a course or something and you're going to start the week before the course sending those reminders to convert on the course, like maybe it's a minimal part of your newsletter, but you've got a sale sequence, right? We all do things like this. It helps if when I get those promotional emails and I'm not going to convert, it helps
00:18:15
Speaker
that I don't subscribe. The newsletter keeps me hanging on. So maybe at some point, of course, I do convert on, right? So you haven't lost me completely. Another worst practice that I see is assuming that the audience cares a lot about your company and what's happening in your company. And so we just hired so-and-so. Here's his CV.
00:18:42
Speaker
Like now maybe a Q and a with this guy, like maybe like if there's some reason that his knowledge is going to help me when in life, like maybe I would read a Q and a, but I don't want, and then I don't want to have to feel guilty that I don't want to read.
00:18:58
Speaker
the bio or the thing, right? So attempting to publish all their own content, that's not a hard thing for a large team, but small teams have trouble. And so they tend to reduce the number of times they send their newsletter out based on the fact that they only publish four blogs a month or less than

Avoiding Formality in Newsletter Language

00:19:17
Speaker
that. And so they want to have plenty of stuff to use in that newsletter. And they're not bringing in third party curated links to supplement that. I think bringing in links
00:19:28
Speaker
Is a great way to test whether a topic resonates with your audience like hey, let's curate the story about this See if it gets any action then we can know if we might want to pursue that Further from our own brand perspective in the blog So that's another thing is not having like a strong point of view or perspective just being kind of like we're for everyone we don't just like we don't have a strong opinion about this like a brand with a strong opinion is more memorable and relatable and
00:19:57
Speaker
And then another practice that I kind of...
00:20:01
Speaker
It just gives me like the chalkboard, screech kind of sound when I see it. Like I have that feeling like your spine, like when you see it is this super formal language.

Mobile Optimization and Deliverability

00:20:15
Speaker
Email is like a letter, like you send your friends emails, right? Like, hey, thought you would like this. How you doing? Whatever. It's somehow, especially if you're not sending it from a person, you're sending it from a brand.
00:20:30
Speaker
People like get in this weird mindset where they write like super corporate like dearest Mark or you know, we hope you've been well or you know, dear valued customer and like super elevate and formalize the language. Right. And once you do that, you have kind of like what you have done is you have built distance.
00:20:55
Speaker
between the brand and the recipient. So the closer you can get to them, the better. So use you, right? Like you talk, like be, have a tone and a personality in the newsletter. So those are some of the big ones. And then I think one really awful one is when people, they forget that email is like a mobile app.
00:21:20
Speaker
And they write everything and design everything to look great on desktop, but not to be consumed in an email, on your phone, excuse me. And so I know it kind of feels wrong. And my CEO, and I go back and forth on this, because I told him he did a LinkedIn post the other day. And I was like, it's one paragraph. You got to break this thing up. And so he created a post that made fun of,
00:21:47
Speaker
how we write for different channels or whatever. If your copy block is longer than the screen on the phone, you need to break that up. One in two sentence paragraphs are okay in emails. They are easier to digest in that way and that kind of takes us back to a story brand mindset of how many reading calories
00:22:14
Speaker
How many mental calories is my audience willing to burn when they get this? What can I ask from them? And the easier it is and the better the formatting. And then I think one last thing would be not testing deliverability and not testing if it's clipped in Gmail. Because there's a lot of under the iceberg kind of stuff going on in some builders that you don't even realize are keeping
00:22:43
Speaker
getting you eclipped in Gmail, which I never do, by the way, I never get clipped. What that does is that hides your unsubscribe. So you have now made it harder for people who like, there are people who don't understand how to see the rest of your email, they exist. And then they mark you as spam, because they cannot figure out how to unsubscribe from it. It's a thing. I think those are some of the worst of the worst.

Where to Find More About Ashley Katusa

00:23:09
Speaker
So one final question, where can people learn more about you?
00:23:12
Speaker
If you want to find me specifically, go to LinkedIn or opt-in weekly. If you want to learn more about simple focus software, the links to some of those brands are in my LinkedIn bio.
00:23:21
Speaker
Well, thanks, Ashley, for all your insight about newsletters and email marketing.

Conclusion and Podcast Outro

00:23:26
Speaker
It's, as I said, doesn't probably get a lot of attention as being sexy and glamorous, but it is sort of one of the workhorses of the digital marketing landscapes. So I really appreciate your tips and your advice. And if anybody's looking for advice on how to write a better newsletter, subscribe to Optin Weekly.
00:23:42
Speaker
Well, thanks for listening to another episode of Marketing Spark. If you enjoyed the conversation, leave a review and subscribe via iTunes, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. For show notes of today's conversation and information about Ashley, visit marketingspark.co slash blog. If you'd like information about how I help B2B SaaS companies as a fractional CMO, strategic advisor and coach, send an email to mark at marketingspark.co. I'll talk to you next time.