Still nowhere near your first 1,000 email subscribers? able to hand over on growing your list?
It looks like regardless of what you are doing, your list
size never changes.
Maybe you continue to haven't any subscribers in the least.
Either way, that initial climb to 1,000 subscribers can
feel painfully slow, maybe even impossible.
The good news is, there are some straightforward, but
not-often-shared, ways to grow your email list which will make all the
difference.
The three steps I’m getting to share with you would
possibly seem simple, but make no mistake — they’re the keys to unlocking the
precise quite growth you’ve wanted.
But before we get into that …
You need to understand something first, and it’s this:
If you don’t understand who your ideal customer is, you’ll
fail.
Sorry to be blunt, but it’s the reality.
Unless you intimately understand your audience, what
they’re battling, and what they need, you’ll never see the expansion you would
like from your business, including from your email list.
So before you follow any of the three steps below to urge
your first 1,000 email subscribers, get clear on your ideal customer first.
Step #1: Follow the 10-Person Rule
One of the simplest traps to fall under when growing your
list is thinking too big too fast.
You have to start out small because, well, you're small
immediately. you've got to steer before you'll run, that sort of thing.
Enter the 10-Person Rule.
This comes from my friend Nathan Barry, the founder and CEO
of ConvertKit.
Here’s what you do:
First, identify 10 people that you recognize would enjoy
and enjoy your writing, from the knowledge you share.
This could be anybody — friends, co-workers, relations,
anyone you've got even a thread of connection to.
All that matters is that your topic has relevance and use
to them.
Next, once you’ve written down those 10 names, message them
personally and ask them these three questions:
1. What’s your biggest frustration when learning about
[topic]?
2. Which websites, blogs, or forums does one currently
visit to find out about [topic]?
3. I’m starting a replacement site to show [topic]. I’d
love for you to be one of my beta readers. Interested?
These questions are gold.
Like I said before, the higher you recognize your
customers, the more you’ll win, and there’s no better way than by asking them
these sorts of direct questions.
You might even consider sending the primary two questions
on their own, and if you get detailed responses, ask them the third.
Ideally, you’ll begin of those conversations with 10 new
email subscribers, an inventory of exactly where your audience hangs out, and
your next several blog post topics.
From here, you merely rinse and repeat. As you gain new
subscribers, you'll ask them equivalent questions and obtain whole new sets of
responses and suggestions, which successively helps you grow strategically.
I can’t understate the facility of doing this. I do know
people that have taken it even further and reached bent hundreds (even
thousands) of individuals during a week. It helped them grow their lists from
zero to up to 1,200 people. in only one week.
It really works. If you're taking away nothing else from
this post, just confirm you are doing this.
Step #2: Teach a selected topic
Customers today are savvy, and far more protective of their
email addresses than they wont to be.
It’s personal information — something they’ll only give
bent someone they trust and if they believe they’ll get value from the
exchange.
That’s why I like to recommend you steer beyond asking
people to “join your newsletter.”
It’s too vague and sometimes doesn’t clearly present any value.
In fact, all it does is a promise that they’ll get more email, which I’m sure
is at the rock bottom of their list.
Instead, teach them something. Offer something useful, sort
of a course or guide.
“Get a free course on writing great content” is way more
powerful than “join my newsletter.”
People want help solving their problems, and I’ve found
that if you aren’t getting the e-mail sign-ups or sales you would like you
were, the likelihood is that people don’t truly understand how you help them
solve their problems.
When someone truly wants their problem solved and you offer
them an answer, their resistance comes crashing down.
Instead of begging someone to check-in, they’ll be begging
you to urge in (except the door is already open, so your list will just
continue to grow and growing).
If you aren’t sure the way to implement this, here’s a
tried-and-true method:
1. believe your audience. What problem might they be
experiencing immediately in their life, associated with your topic?
2. are you able to help them solve that problem? I bet
you'll. Write down the steps they have to require . It might be five or 10, it
doesn’t matter.
3. Now write emails on each of these steps and bundle them
together like an email course.
4. Offer it for free of charge on your blog or website, and
found out the emails as a drip sequence after someone signs up.
5. You’re done! you only made an email course.
That’s all it takes.
It might seem small, but that adjustment can mean the
difference between an email list bursting at the seams (and money within the
bank, if you’re selling something) and a digital town .
Step #3: Build relationships (and relationships aren’t just
numbers)
When you’re building your email list, don’t forget it isn’t
just a “list.”
There are real people behind those email addresses. Real
people reading your blog and selecting to check in . Don’t blindly grow your
list only for the sake of the numbers and your ego.
A massive list filled with the incorrect people isn't only
useless, it’s frustrating, and expensive. You won’t get results. Your emails
won’t get opened. Your business won’t grow.
I’ve seen it over and once again .
The “growth in the least costs” mindset leads great
business owners to resort to gimmicky list-building “hacks.”
It’s not worthwhile . I promise.
Instead, specialise in your audience. Be intentional. If
you specialise in serving, giving value, and solving their problems, you’ll
grow faster than you ever imagined.
Just keep exposure (and email those 10 friends).
What about you?
Can you consider 10 people that you'll reach bent right
now?
Do you have a course in mind to exchange your “join my
newsletter” button?
What are your biggest struggles with building your email
list?



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