accountancy

Why your accountancy firm needs its own client enewsletter

Why your accountancy firm needs to send out enewsletters

Most of us have signed up to receive email newsletters – the good, the bad and the ugly. We look forward to receiving the ones we like and value, but soon unsubscribe from those crammed with irrelevant content or a blatant barrage of sales messages.

Just when they looked to be all but dying out, about three years ago enewsletters underwent a renaissance. Everyone was doing them again; some were superb and they helped brands to build better customer relationships. Enewsletters can be a particularly effective marketing tool for accountants and other service-based businesses.

Enewsletters can be a particularly effective marketing tool for accountants and other service-based businesses

Why are email newsletters popular?

Email marketing is where you send out pure sales-related content, for example, information about your latest offers. But enewsletters contain news, features and other content designed to inform recipients – to increase their knowledge.

The key reason why people sign up to enewsletters is they want to learn more about things they’re interested in. Many of us love enewsletters and those that national newspapers send out every day are now among the most popular. Your average enewsletter design is now far better and enewsletters are much easier to read on smartphone, which has also helped to boost their popularity, because you can read them wherever you are (almost).

If someone has signed up to receive your enewsletter, it’s less likely to be spam-filtered. And research suggests that the average enewsletter open rate is high, providing you have a good subject line and the recipient recognises the sender. Pick a good mix of high-quality, relevant, timely content and your click-through rates can also be high.

If you provide valuable information that benefits subscribers, they’re more likely to know, like and trust you – and buy what you’re selling

Highly effective

When well written, produced and distributed, email newsletters are a highly effective way to reach prospects and existing customers, ensuring that you remain in their thoughts (or occasionally pop into their heads, at least).

If you provide valuable information that benefits subscribers, they’re more likely to know, like and trust you – and buy what you’re selling – the ultimate aim, of course. In a business context, your enewsletter information should enable recipients to increase their knowledge, solve their problems, save time, money or otherwise become more profitable and successful.

Having your own enewsletter can make your small accountancy firm appear bigger and more professional – and more interested in its clients – which can really set you apart from your competitors. Adding value to your customer relationships in this way can ensure that your customers remain loyal.

Latest news, tips, updates and key-date reminders are all common enewsletter content, but longer-from content can also prove popular

Question of balance

Latest news, tips, updates and key-date reminders are all common enewsletter ingredients, but longer-from content can also prove popular. You can tell recipients about latest developments, whether in their sector, the small-business world or at your business (don’t overdo this). Sharing your insight via enewsletter is a good way to underline your credibility as an expert, while competitions and giveaways are also popular. Research suggests that subscribers are happy to hear about new offers or latest deals via enewsletters (but limit this also). Think “tell, tell”, rather than “sell, sell”.

Some businesses send out weekly enewsletters, while others send them out every two weeks, each month or quarter. Many accountants send out Budget specials, of course, while many have sent out special enewsletter to explain the latest Covid-19-related changes. Frequency is key, because you mustn’t bombard recipients, you simply want to keep them connected, engaged and informed.

Part of email marketing’s attraction is it offers a great return on investment – some believe a £42 ROI for every £1 you spend

Return on investment

Enewsletters can be created for very little cost, even if you buy content. Part of email marketing’s attraction is it offers a great return on investment (ROI) – some believe a £42 ROI for every £1 you spend (source: Direct Marketing Association). That’s a pretty compelling claim.

Testing and analytics enable you to quickly find out what works best, whether that’s your subject lines, content type or when to send your enewsletter. Setting up and managing a customer enewsletter is relatively straightforward, but if you just don’t have the time, knowledge or inclination, paying someone else to do it for you could prove a wise investment.

In my next post, I’ll provide a step-by-step guide to setting up an enewsletter for your accountancy firm, together with some important legal considerations.

• With 15 years’ experience as a leading writer of small-business content, Mark Williams is the founder of Dead Good Content, which specialises in writing readymade and bespoke content for accountancy firms and others that want to market their services to small businesses.