The details:<p>I have a daily emails newsletter which, basically, acts like a blog. I write a story sharing some true, typically unknown item (Abe Lincoln created the Secret Service the day he was shot, for example) with the readers. I'm not putting the URL here because I want to be clear that this question isn't intended as a promotional vehicle.<p>The email costs me $50/mo to send. (I'm using Mailchimp and that's their monthly fee.) It'll cost me $75 when/if I break the 5,000 subscriber plateau. It's not expensive, but I'd like to break even, and I'm looking for easy ways to get there. (The list is waaaaaaaay too small to consider direct sales brand advertising.)<p>I can't run AdWords or, for that matter, any standard ad network's banners, because the content is delivered via email. I occasionally drop in an Amazon affiliate link but I don't want to overdo it. (Perhaps a "Book of the Day" line would be good, or "Related Reading.")<p>I'm looking for ideas which are out of the box. Anyone?
Affiliates. If you write about Abe Lincoln, link to the best biography about him.<p>If you always write about surprising stuff, find books that map to that: <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Never-Shower-Thunderstorm-Surprising-Misleading/dp/080508312X" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Never-Shower-Thunderstorm-Surprising-M...</a><p>Sponsors are good too but require a bit more hustle.
It's a great newsletter, and here is the URL: <a href="http://dlewis.net/nik/" rel="nofollow">http://dlewis.net/nik/</a> (I subscribe and actually read it often.)<p>Regarding your question, check this out: <a href="http://www.kehalim.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.kehalim.com/</a> It's contextual advertising for pretty much anything, including email.
If it is a daily email, I'd put a little note that says something like "Advertise here for $5 a day and be seen by over 3000 viewers!" If I was an active reader of the newsletter, and owned a small website somewhat related to what you email about, I'd spend 1/10th of a penny per eyeball.
Do you know anything else about your audience other than that they enjoy "daily facts"?<p>The more relevant your affiliate ads, the higher conversion rate you should have, so target with that in mind. Obviously, the more you know about your audience, the closer you can target.<p>It seems like something like this could initially go after books with trivia info, mental floss, etc. But I wouldn't get too caught up with this step. It's a daily email, so you could try out 365 different things each year and see what works.<p>Your best bet is to just play around with products, measure everything you can (obviously MailChimp clicks, but you must also measure conversions after they click, revenue, etc).
Just ask for it. I remember putting a "Buy Raganwald a Coffee" Paypal link on my blog and presto, people started clicking the link and sending me $1.27 each. I tried raising prices: I changed the link to "Buy Raganwald a Double Espresso" and people started sending me $3.15 each, and numbers did not fall by 2/3.<p>Start by asking for donations. You may be pleasantly surprised by what your readers will do for you.
Have you looked at how your competitors make money?<p>This reminds me of omg-facts.com which I follow on Twitter and greatly enjoy (@OMGFacts). Seems they're reasonably successful with 1.6mil followers and various subcategory accounts (OMGFactsCelebs, OMGFactsSex, etc.) Their strategy seems to be occasional cross promotion and funnel readers to their site which is laden with advertisements. That's one option. (1)<p>(2) Charge subscription fees (perhaps $5/yr) for a premium version of the mailing list and treat the free one as a light upsell. Assuming you get 5% conversion, that's $750/yr or $62.50/mo. You'll need to figure out what kinds of extras you need to provide for your audience to consider it worth pulling out their credit card.<p>Alternatively could beg for donations, but I would rather donate by buying something from you.<p>(3) Find a cheaper way to send newsletters. Given Mailchimp's price points, seems the only way to go cheaper is to do it yourself. This is probably not worth it for you.<p>(4) webwright's point of doing Affiliates. No reason not to do this, very little effort and adds value to the newsletter.<p>(5) Merchandise. Perhaps compile a book of a year's worth of factoids and self-publish? Could do a paid ebook or printed on-demand via Amazon or Lulu.com. Could also do calendars (the one post-it per day kind, or the monthly flip ones). Once you have some solid merch, you could try and peddle to other resellers.<p>I like all of these, but not at the same time. I'd start with affiliates, then make a destination blog that mirrors the content but has a bit more engagement and some ads (also mirror on Twitter/Facebook, start building a brand), then do a premium newsletter/merchandise, then someday when you're a kingpin with millions of subscribers you can look into rolling your own mailing server.<p>P.S. I subscribed to your newsletter via acangiano's link. Looking forward to it. :)
Hi Dan,
You can partner up with startups that are really hungry for reviews and exposure... just like us www.quoteroller.com :)
A little blog post and paragraph about our app won't hurt while would be happy to pay a little fee for it.
I'll be happy to sponsor 1 month of your cost (i.e. $50) against suitable mention (once or twice a week, in any form and style) of either one or both of our recent by-products:<p><a href="http://www.RapiDefs.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.RapiDefs.com</a> and<p><a href="http://getLocalNe.ws" rel="nofollow">http://getLocalNe.ws</a><p>Check out these two URLs (I believe both would have a good general match with your readers) and let me know (email in profile).
Drop MailChimp and save the $50. Get a server running Linux. Use Mailman to manage your mailing list or do something custom. Write a custom maier program in Python to distribute the emails. Write the list content in HTML If you don't have a spare server, you should be able to find one suitable for this task for $20 or less per month. Use other suggestions here to generate additional income.
I think this can be addressed by really thinking about your users and their profile. If these people tend to like to be informed about unique or little-known facts, they are probably fairly inquisitive. They might even like brain teasers, quiz games, etc. I think you should test this out by including one or two featured links to products that your market might appreciate.<p>For example, when talking about the Abe Lincoln/Secret Service example you might include further reading about Abe Lincoln with a link to the book Team of Rivals. This is a good example of an obvious subject-link related to the little-known fact. However, you could also include links to trivia games on Amazon, or general knowledge books like the World Almanac of Presidential Facts. I would include some humor in your links as well.<p>Take your best ideas and include a short survey in your email to get your users' opinion on the options.
1. Gather some stats on who your readers are (ie., country, language, profession, interest, gender, etc).
2. Look for a sponsor who will give you $100/month to sponsor your newsletter. In return they get some kind of ad space in your newsletter. It could be tasteful, like some kind of sponsorship banner or something.
What about creating a paid premium newsletter using Letter.ly Perhaps send the premium daily and the free one weekly. Depending on your conversion rates it should be enough to cover expenses and gives you an opportunity to grow paid subscriptions into potentially meaningful income.
You could do a number of things depending on your subscriber demographics.<p>If you want to go the advertising route, it's best to go directly to relevant businesses. See this - <a href="http://garyvaynerchuk.com/post/78967452/want-to-get-advertisers-on-your-blogvlog-go-and-get-it" rel="nofollow">http://garyvaynerchuk.com/post/78967452/want-to-get-advertis...</a><p>The other way is to just sell something directly to your readers. First test a few different products (some rare history book, photobook etc) by adding a link to the bottom of your email and seeing which one gets the most clicks. Once you know what's popular, buy it in bulk and sell.
Sell t-shirts and mugs with some of the more popular facts. Github was able to sell out of tees and mugs with just their logo on it, so I imagine people would want them with interesting content rather than just a logo.<p>Additionally (or alternatively) you could create a fmylife.com equivalent for your facts. Even if you don't let users submit content, it's a place where the community can vote on their favorite bits of info. Doesn't even need tons of ads, and you can take private advertising and make sure they are all in good taste for your audience.
I would ask the guys at Cool Tools (first result on google) for their ideas. They post cool or unique tools and reviews from users, often with an affiliate link at the bottom (to Amazon for example). Don't force it, but if you find yourself mentioning a product, affiliate link to it. For example, your post about purple carrots had a link to seeds. Use a referral to get a percentage of the sales from people visiting that link.
How about something like those motivational posters or t-shirts? It seems like the same crowd would enjoy those that enjoy 'now you know' one liner facts.<p>You could also turn your one liners into partnerships. I saw you had a post about purple carrots and linked to seeds, why not have a partnership once in a while for things like that with sites that sell seeds and see how things convert. Hope that is helpful.
Here's an idea.<p>There is Follow Friday on Twitter. You can do a Sponsors Friday, where you can send over offers related to your blog, topic, and its readers.<p>You need to track the CTR, etc. Put a decent infographics. If your CTR is good, and your topic is niche, approach folks into affiliate marketing or affiliate managers, they will be able to tell you what offers to run.
Set up a page where you display a graph of hosting costs. Next to it, a graph of revenue from your existing affiliates plus donations from readers. Accept donations. Every time someone donates the graph changes.<p>Put the link in the footer of your emails.<p>I don't know if it will work, though.
how about just making people pay for the newsletter?<p><a href="http://tinyletter.com/?pay" rel="nofollow">http://tinyletter.com/?pay</a><p>Might lose some people, but if all 3500 stay, you only need each person to pay .015 per month. Of course this is just hypothetical. Maybe its $1/month.
Accept sponsorships from people who target that audience.
Once a week, send a mail about the sponsors (or put it into one of the daily mails) and explain what they do and why they might interest the audience.
provide good content and (most likely) no one will mind affiliate links, even if there are a few per email. people will only start to care once you start generating content specifically for the ability to link.<p>just keep doing what you're doing and don't shoehorn them in. only insert them where relevant.