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The Dirty Secret
of HTML vs. Text E-newsletters...
Two sides
to the publishing equation
By
Debbie Weil [May
14, 2003 issue]
Read
my Open Letter to
Texties to find out why I've decided to publish only in HTML. (Text
subscribers will still receive a short text email with a link to the Web
version of the newsletter. About one out of 10 new subscribers to WordBiz
Report chooses plain-text.)
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Exactly
one year ago I spoke to a packed audience at ClickZ's
Email Strategies Conference in New York City. I earnestly opined that it
was ever so important to offer B2B (business to business) e-newsletter readers
the choice of text vs. HTML. By this I mean a complete, separate text version
of your email newsletter.
Well, I've changed my mind.
Here's the dirty secret: there are two sides to the e-newsletter publishing
equation.
That of the publisher, who wants to track reader response as closely as possible.
And that of the subscriber, who cares about reading the email in whichever format
is easier or preferred.
Most subscribers opt for an attractive-looking HTML version these days. But
there is still a vocal minority which insists on text.
Which
format wins?
Guess which format wins if you're the publisher? HTML, of course.
Sending in HTML means you can track a bunch of metrics: from open rates to click-throughs
for the full story. You know exactly who is reading what - and, with the capabilities
of some email service providers, when and how many times.
Is this Big Brother snooping on your subscribers? I say phooey. Publishing a
free e-newsletter is a form of email marketing. It's a lead-generating tool
or an upsell to a paid product.
As
a publisher you're also in the content business. But, hey, good content isn't
(or shouldn't be) free. There's an unstated quid pro quo: I send you a useful
newsletter; you let me know whether you're reading it, buying something through
it, or passing it on.
It's
up to you as a publisher to decide whether you want to go the extra mile to
offer a nicely formatted text-only version of your publication. You won't learn
much about these readers (other than their preference for text) because you
can't track whether they're opening your messages, etc.
Exceptions
to the I wanna know everything rule
On the other hand, some successful newsletter publishers swear by a text-only
version. They've been doing it for years and see no reason to change. One is
Randy Cassingham, a B2C (business to consumer) publisher and editor of This
Is True, a weekly e-publication that offers bizarre-but-true stories he's
culled from newspapers. He offers both a free and a paid, premium edition. Both
are plain text and include the full text of each article.
Another
is Anne Holland, B2B publisher of a half dozen text-only newsletters for widely-respected
MarketingSherpa.com. With one exception
(the weekly summary edition), Sherpa includes the full text of each article
or case study. Many of her readers (myself included) print these 8-page behemoths
out and read them later.
The stats on HTML vs. text preference
The most recent edition (published in August 2002) of eMarketer's
E-Mail Marketing Report reports a mismatch between what readers say they
want and what publishers or marketers are sending. Note: the report doesn't
distinguish between "email promotions" and "e-newsletters."
From
the report: in 1st quarter 2002, 62 percent of consumers surveyed by Opt-In
News said they wanted text. To prove the waters are muddied, another survey
contradicted this, saying that 60 percent of Internet users preferred HTML.
According
to Forrester Research, 63 percent of
marketers were sending their emails as HTML in 2001. A projected 85 percent
will send as HTML in 2003.
What
other publishers say
I did a quick reality check by quizzing several other well-respected publishers
about their text vs. HTML subscriber base:
Ralph
Wilson publishes three e-newsletters about online marketing and e-commerce
through WilsonWeb: HTML is the preselected
format on his sign up forms. An average of 18 percent of his subscribers choose
text.
Allen
Weiss, publisher of MarketingProfs,
says only about 1,000 of his 77,000 subscribers choose the text-only version
of his weekly newsletter.
Janet Roberts, editor of Ezine-Tips,
reports that 17 percent of those who subscribe to the daily tips choose text.
That's up from 10 percent at this time last year.
Barbara Feldman publishes several newsletters through SurfNetKids.
She says her list is 70 percent text. Here's why: "On most of my email
sign-up forms I do not even give the subscriber a choice. They simply get text.
Periodically, I remind my text readers that they can switch to HTML if they
prefer."
Useful
Links
Newsletters in plain text, PDF or HTML by
Ralph Wilson
Why readers prefer text or HTML by Lynda
Partner
Still
Rearing Its Ugly Head: HTML vs. Text by Debbie Weil (in ClickZ)
As quoted
by Janet Roberts in Ezine-Tips on the HTML vs. text debate [May 6, 2003].
CLICK
HERE to take a quick survey on text vs. HTML
e-newsletters and enter this issue's book giveaway.
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©
2003 WordBiz.com, Inc. May not be reprinted without permission.
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