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Turn
Your Old Articles Into Profitable E-mail
Courses |
by:
Shery
Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ |
If
you've written numerous articles, you can
use them to further promote yourself and
your business, e-zine or web site.
You can re-use your old articles by transforming
them into another form of promotional tool.
And one way to re-use them is by turning
them into e-mail courses. By doing so, you'll
be able to offer a new product that will
help you establish your credibility as a
business owner, e-zine publisher or web
site owner.
Even though you'll make use of old articles,
you won't be offering a re-hash.
Why? Because once you transform your old
articles and gather them together to form
an e-mail course, you add a more focused
learning dimension to them. For this, you're
able to create a new and effective marketing
tool.
So how do you do it? In a nutshell:
1. Gather all your articles and find a common
theme among them. If you've written a number
of articles aimed for beginning online business
owners, these articles can make up one e-mail
course. Your e-mail course can be a short
one (2-4 articles) or a long one (5 or more).
2. When you've identified a common theme,
arrange your articles in a way that provides
some sort of logic or flow to them.
3. Assign one article as one e-mail module
or follow up. If you're using 4 articles,
your e-mail course would consist of 4 modules
or follow ups.
4. Take a good look at each article. Does
it look like you can weave the activities
within 'lessons' or will it require you
to separate the 'lessons' from the 'assignments'
-- information first (your re-written article)
and then hands-on activities or tests after?
5. Do your articles use the 'you' voice?
If not, re-write as if you're telling your
friend a story. Do your articles sound formal?
Even though you're 'teaching' something,
strive to keep it lighthearted. Be engaging
and friendly, but never be too flippant
or condescending.
6. Include additional resources at the end
of each module or follow up. These resources
could be online references and researches,
and even more intensive lessons.
7. Proofread.
8. Insert your promotional texts in the
beginning, middle or end of each module
or follow up. However, don't overdo this.
People who will request your e-mail course
are going to see through you once they find
out that your promotional texts far outweigh
the lessons and valuable instructions in
your e-mail course. Put value over the content
of your e-mail course first and your workshop
takers will trust you and believe in your
expertise.
9. Put your e-mail course on autoresponder
and set the time each module or follow up
will be sent. You can use free or fee-based
autoresponders.
Before you announce your e-mail course,
test and re-test it thoroughly. When you're
certain everything is fine, go ahead and
announce it.
About the author:
Copyright (c) Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
Shery is the developer of creative, motivating
and fun e-mail courses for writers. Sign
up and take an e-mail course today -- free!
-- at http://WritingBliss.com.
She also authored the e-book that lets you
create your own original and profitable
E-mail Workshops, eCourses and Tutorials
in only 3 days! Visit http://EmailWorkshopsHowTo.comfor
more info.
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