Live from Cafe Lucca, Kolding: My recommendations for CampaignMonitor.
One of my clients wanted to start sending out newsletters, 4–6 every year, showcasing their work and products. I’ve been in trouble with newsletters before; homemade systems have crashed, actual listservers seemed a bit tricky if the client didn’t want to manage stuff via email etc. etc. Everything below 500 recipients should be possible to do using Outlook or something along those lines, but then you have the whole unsubscribing issue, lack of stats and difficulties creating the content properly.
CampaignMonitor to the rescue. They claim to focus on web developers wanting a good feature set for their clients and they’ve got an interesting deal going on: You pay $5 as a startup fee for each campaign you send out and one cent per recipient. First of all, it’s a good product and easy to manage even if you’re not a web developer (the thing here is simply that it’s easy to offer this service using their web application), but the pricing structure is kind of interesting as well. Obviously, if you have thousands of recipients and send out stuff frequently it’ll quickly get rather expensive. But for the small company wanting to focus on content and not paying for something they might not use, it’s a sweet deal. Especially because of the features.
The interface is simple and elegant (Basecamp style), you can give your clients (if you run them through your account) access to the detailed graphic reports via your own subdomain (Basecamp style), put signup forms on your own page (Basecamp style) and you always have detailed information on click-rates, unsubscribed adresses, bounces and statistics over time at your hand. Powerful shit. A day after we sent out the campaign, we can track down important recipients and see how they reacted to the campaign, see how many mails are opened at this time etc., giving my client a solid knowledge base to build future campagns on.
All in all a great product with good possibilities for previewing your content, test send the actual campaign and export the reports. I’ve mentioned Basecamp a couple of times which isn’t a coincidence; I only know of CampaignMonitor because of a product plug over at Signal vs. Noise. Oh, the power of sharing.…
And now back to real life in Kolding where the weather’s horrible, the wifi-access expensive and the girls far from pretty — but where you can charge your laptop while sipping coffee.
Superp tip — thanks!!!
Thanks so much for the kind words about our software Anders.
It’s feedback like this that makes the hard work pay off. As you could imagine, it can be hard getting the word out to the community. Posts like yours and the one on 37 Signal’s blog really do help.