Newsletter Writing Guide
Newsletter Types
| Type | Tone | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Company update | Professional, warm | Clarity, relevance |
| Product announcement | Excited, informative | Benefits, what's new |
| Industry roundup | Authoritative, helpful | Curation, insights |
| Personal/creator | Conversational, authentic | Connection, personality |
| Team digest | Informal, efficient | Brevity, highlights |
Multi-Audience Newsletters
When your newsletter serves multiple audience segments (technical + non-technical, free + paid, internal + external):
Option 1: Layered Content
Lead with the universal benefit anyone can grasp. Add labeled sections for advanced readers: "For developers:" or "Technical deep-dive:". This lets everyone get the core message while specialists can go deeper.
Option 2: Modular Sections
Create clearly labeled sections for different audiences. "For Engineering:", "For Business Users:". Each segment gets relevant content without wading through irrelevant material.
Option 3: Consider Segmentation
If audiences have fundamentally different needs, separate newsletters may serve better than one trying to do both. Link between them for cross-pollination.
The layered approach works best for most mixed-audience newsletters. Start broad, add depth progressively.
Subject Line Best Practices
Good Subject Lines
- "3 things I learned at [Conference]" — specific, personal
- "We shipped [Feature]. Here's why it matters." — news + benefit
- "The one metric we got wrong" — curiosity, vulnerability
- "[Name], your weekly digest is here" — personalized, expected
Bad Subject Lines
- "Newsletter #47" — no reason to open
- "Don't miss this!!!" — spammy
- "Updates" — vague
- "Important information inside" — generic
Formula
[Specific thing] + [Why reader cares]
Structure
SUBJECT LINE
[Hook + value signal]
PREVIEW TEXT
[Extends subject, shows in inbox]
---
OPENER
[2-3 sentences: context, hook, or "here's what's in this issue"]
MAIN SECTION 1
[Lead story or update]
[2-3 short paragraphs]
[Link if relevant]
MAIN SECTION 2
[Secondary story]
[Keep it scannable]
QUICK HITS
- [One-liner with link]
- [One-liner with link]
- [One-liner with link]
CLOSER
[Wrap-up or preview]
[CTA if relevant]
[Sign-off]Writing Tips
Openers That Work
- The question: "Ever wonder why [X]?"
- The surprise: "We were wrong about [X]."
- The personal: "Last week, I [did X] and learned [Y]."
- The direct: "Three things you need to know this week:"
Keep It Scannable
- Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max)
- Headers for each section
- Bullet lists for quick items
- Bold key points (sparingly)
- White space is your friend
Write for Mobile
- 60%+ of emails opened on mobile
- Single column layout
- Thumb-friendly links
- Preview text matters
Calls to Action
Good:
- "Read the full post →"
- "Reply and tell me what you think"
- "Grab your spot before Friday"
Bad:
- "Click here"
- Multiple competing CTAs
- No CTA at all
Accessibility
- Use semantic headers (H1, H2, H3) rather than just bold text
- Include alt text for any images
- Make links descriptive ("Read the changelog" not "click here")
- Don't rely on color alone to convey meaning
- Keep sufficient contrast between text and background
Email Deliverability
Spam Trigger Avoidance
- Skip ALL CAPS in subject lines
- Avoid excessive punctuation ("Amazing!!!", "Don't miss this???")
- Don't use misleading subject lines that don't match content
- Keep link count reasonable (under 10-15 for short newsletters)
Mobile Rendering
- Preview text shows on ~90% of mobile email clients—make it count
- Subject lines truncate around 40 characters on mobile
- First 3 lines visible without scrolling; put your hook there
Image Considerations
- Some email clients block images by default
- Include alt text for all images
- Don't rely solely on images to convey critical information
- Aim for at least 60% text content
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Too long | Aim for 3-5 min read max for most newsletters |
| Buried lede | Lead with the most important thing |
| No personality | Let your voice come through |
| All links, no context | Give readers a reason to click |
| Inconsistent schedule | Pick a cadence and stick to it |
| No subject line testing | Write 3-5, pick the best |
Tone Calibration
Casual/Creator
Hey! Quick one today—I found this thread on [topic] and had to share. It completely changed how I think about [X]...
Professional/Company
This week we're excited to share updates on [Project], along with key learnings from our Q3 analysis...
Team/Internal
Happy Friday, team! Here's what happened this week and what's coming up...
Metrics That Matter
- Open rate: Subject line effectiveness (aim for 25%+)
- Click rate: Content relevance (aim for 2-5%)
- Unsubscribe rate: Overall value (keep under 0.5%)
- Reply rate: Engagement, connection
If open rate is low, test subject lines.
If click rate is low, improve content or CTAs.
If unsubscribe rate is high, reconsider frequency or relevance.