Every month, I send an email roundup to Buttondown's subscriber list about new features that are launched, upcoming work, and other interesting updates.
I end each email with some sort of exhortation to reply to the email:
Loved this email? Hated this email? I want to hear about it! If you think there’s something that needs to be improved — or, even better, if there’s just something you wish was improved — reply to this email because I want to know more!
Each time I do this, I get a lot of answers — last month, it was around 65.
This sounds like a fairly banal call-to-action, I know. But I'm confident that some variation of "plz reply" is the best way to drive engagement, especially when you've got a somewhat amorphous newsletter: this mailing list is a delightful cornucopia of potential customers, existing customers, and churned customers, so trying to be aggressive about selling isn't quite the right fit. (It's also, frankly, not my style!)
Here's why:
To quote from Brennan Dunn's excellent newsletter:
This is also a more reactive way of listening. Why? Because you can reply to those emails with, "This is such a great question, Brennan. Would you mind if I reply to this as a dedicated email to my list?"
This becomes a win for them (a much more thorough reply than they'd get if you were sending something 1:1), and a win for you – another piece of shareable content that reacts to an actual need someone has.