To all my fellow USA readers: I wish you a safe and happy 4th of July, aka Independence Day. I had a quiet signing on July 1st at Borders Express in Mays Landing, NJ. Gorgeous summer weather in South NJ generally keeps people out of the malls. Can’t say I blame them.
Small family get together today, although we’re expecting thunderstorm, potentially damaging thunderstorms with high winds and hail possible. Guess nature wants to trot out her own fireworks for the occasion.
I have one scheduled signing left (July 22 at Borders Express in Echelon Mall from 2 to 5pm), although I may schedule more signings. Although I’m quickly running out of KINDRED SPIRIT giveaway items!
Best face forward: Remember, if you see copies of KINDRED SPIRIT in a bookstore near you, I’d appreciate it if you’d turn them face out. Believe me, it helps. And, if you read and enjoy KINDRED SPIRIT, please tell your friends and online acquaintances about it. Thank you!
Newsletter: I’ve been sending out nearly weekly newsletters (to the consternation of a very few some subscribers), mainly to send reminders about these summer signings. It’s hard to attract crowds to the malls during the summer in this area, so I wanted to give anyone interested every possible chance of remembering where I would be on a given weekend. With only one signing left, I expect to go to a much less frequent newsletter schedule.
But another, growing, problem I see with the newsletter is the declining successful delivery rate. My paid mailing list service tells me the percentage of newsletters that were received and “opened”, and for the past year, I’ve watched that percentage decline from a high in the 90% range to rarely more than 50%. Percentages in the 40s are much more common lately. That means that less than half of the newsletters I send are received. And remember, these are opt-in subscribers. For every 100 people who said send me the newsletter, only 40 or so actually receive it.
Why? My guess is spam blocking at various levels: ISP, e-mail client, anti-spam software. Subscribers either never see it because their Internet provider is blocking delivery or because their own software deems the software to be spam, aka junk mail, and throws it in a spam or junk mail folder along with all the actual spam. I regularly check my own spam/junk folders and will find newsletters I have subscribed to in there, mixed in with all the real spam. I pull them out. But I think a lot of people either never check spam/junk folders for good mail or they simply delete everything in there without sifting through all the crap.
So how good is a paid service when its effective delivery rate is 40%? I don’t know. Since the delivery rate has dropped from 90% to 40% in a year, I expect that sometime soon, e-mail newsletters will be practically worthless. What are the alternatives? Postal mail can be very expensive. I spent $300 simply to send postcards to over a 1,000 people. Not much content on a postcard. And I’m not even notified when addresses are bad since there is no return address service on a postcard.
Blogs and message boards and yahoogroup mailing lists are some alternatives. Although the yahoo lists can as easily be dumped into the spam folders. Blogs require readers to either subscribe or keep checking back for new content. As a novel writer, my new releases come out every twelves or eighteen months. Hardly makes for regular blog checking. Message boards are bombarded with spam. I know: I shut my down because I was tired of weeding out all the porn, gambling, Rolex-knockoff, sexual-aid spam entries. Same goes for the site guestbook.
If anyone has any ideas about how to maintain regular contact with readers, let me know.
In the meantime, expect fewer newsletters. In early October, I’ll need to decide whether to renew my annual service. Most likely, I’ll switch to a pay as you go system. That system provides more info about links clicked, etc. so will be more useful as an analytical tool. Even so, I see the author newsletter fading away soon.
Newsletter prizes: Before the newsletter possibly rides off into the sunset, I do need to give away some prizes. When we moved into a new house, I got sidetracked with the giveaways. These prizes will go to subscribers, assuming they receive the prize notifications.
Again, happy 4th of July! And thanks for reading!
-Jack
About John
Bram Stoker Award-Winning author of Wither (co-authored), Wither's Rain, Wither's Legacy, Return to Silent Hill: The Official Movie Novelization, Halloween: The Official Movie Novelization, Shimmer, Kindred Spirit, Exit Strategy & Others and many original media tie-in novels including Supernatural: Joyride, Grimm: The Chopping Block, etc.
Happy 4th of July
To all my fellow USA readers: I wish you a safe and happy 4th of July, aka Independence Day. I had a quiet signing on July 1st at Borders Express in Mays Landing, NJ. Gorgeous summer weather in South NJ generally keeps people out of the malls. Can’t say I blame them.
Small family get together today, although we’re expecting thunderstorm, potentially damaging thunderstorms with high winds and hail possible. Guess nature wants to trot out her own fireworks for the occasion.
I have one scheduled signing left (July 22 at Borders Express in Echelon Mall from 2 to 5pm), although I may schedule more signings. Although I’m quickly running out of KINDRED SPIRIT giveaway items!
Best face forward: Remember, if you see copies of KINDRED SPIRIT in a bookstore near you, I’d appreciate it if you’d turn them face out. Believe me, it helps. And, if you read and enjoy KINDRED SPIRIT, please tell your friends and online acquaintances about it. Thank you!
Newsletter: I’ve been sending out nearly weekly newsletters (to the consternation of a very few some subscribers), mainly to send reminders about these summer signings. It’s hard to attract crowds to the malls during the summer in this area, so I wanted to give anyone interested every possible chance of remembering where I would be on a given weekend. With only one signing left, I expect to go to a much less frequent newsletter schedule.
But another, growing, problem I see with the newsletter is the declining successful delivery rate. My paid mailing list service tells me the percentage of newsletters that were received and “opened”, and for the past year, I’ve watched that percentage decline from a high in the 90% range to rarely more than 50%. Percentages in the 40s are much more common lately. That means that less than half of the newsletters I send are received. And remember, these are opt-in subscribers. For every 100 people who said send me the newsletter, only 40 or so actually receive it.
Why? My guess is spam blocking at various levels: ISP, e-mail client, anti-spam software. Subscribers either never see it because their Internet provider is blocking delivery or because their own software deems the software to be spam, aka junk mail, and throws it in a spam or junk mail folder along with all the actual spam. I regularly check my own spam/junk folders and will find newsletters I have subscribed to in there, mixed in with all the real spam. I pull them out. But I think a lot of people either never check spam/junk folders for good mail or they simply delete everything in there without sifting through all the crap.
So how good is a paid service when its effective delivery rate is 40%? I don’t know. Since the delivery rate has dropped from 90% to 40% in a year, I expect that sometime soon, e-mail newsletters will be practically worthless. What are the alternatives? Postal mail can be very expensive. I spent $300 simply to send postcards to over a 1,000 people. Not much content on a postcard. And I’m not even notified when addresses are bad since there is no return address service on a postcard.
Blogs and message boards and yahoogroup mailing lists are some alternatives. Although the yahoo lists can as easily be dumped into the spam folders. Blogs require readers to either subscribe or keep checking back for new content. As a novel writer, my new releases come out every twelves or eighteen months. Hardly makes for regular blog checking. Message boards are bombarded with spam. I know: I shut my down because I was tired of weeding out all the porn, gambling, Rolex-knockoff, sexual-aid spam entries. Same goes for the site guestbook.
If anyone has any ideas about how to maintain regular contact with readers, let me know.
In the meantime, expect fewer newsletters. In early October, I’ll need to decide whether to renew my annual service. Most likely, I’ll switch to a pay as you go system. That system provides more info about links clicked, etc. so will be more useful as an analytical tool. Even so, I see the author newsletter fading away soon.
Newsletter prizes: Before the newsletter possibly rides off into the sunset, I do need to give away some prizes. When we moved into a new house, I got sidetracked with the giveaways. These prizes will go to subscribers, assuming they receive the prize notifications.
Again, happy 4th of July! And thanks for reading!
-Jack
About John
Bram Stoker Award-Winning author of Wither (co-authored), Wither's Rain, Wither's Legacy, Return to Silent Hill: The Official Movie Novelization, Halloween: The Official Movie Novelization, Shimmer, Kindred Spirit, Exit Strategy & Others and many original media tie-in novels including Supernatural: Joyride, Grimm: The Chopping Block, etc.