Ezine,
Discussion and Announcement List Etiquette
By
Shelley Lowery
The information
super highway, countless intertwining roads of information all
merging into one massive freeway. That's the Internet. Just
about any form of information you could ever want, right at
your fingertips.
The Internet
is far more than just websites. Information is delivered via
email, downloads, newsgroups and forums just to name a few.
In addition, there are literally thousands of ezines, discussion
groups and announcement lists.
These groups
are composed of individuals who either receive information in
the form of a publication or share information with a group.
Although these lists can provide you with a wealth of information,
they can be very time consuming for the owners. With that in
mind, this article will provide you with some basic list etiquette
guidelines.
Ezines
Ezines,
also known as email magazines, online publications and electronic
newsletters, are simply newsletters available via email and/or
online.
Subscribers
sign up to receive a publication and may unsubscribe at any
time. This publication may be delivered
to your email daily, weekly, biweekly or monthly.
Discussion
Groups
Discussion
groups are groups of individuals who have signed up to participate
in group discussions. This type of group delivers messages to
your email each time a member posts. When you reply to a message,
it will be delivered to the entire group.
Announcement
Lists
Announcement
lists enable members to sign up to receive and post announcements
in regard to a specific subject. This type of group may deliver
messages as they are posted or you may receive a certain number
of the messages at one time.
Forums/Message
Boards
Forums or
message boards are online threaded discussion groups in which
messages are displayed on web pages.
Some forums
require you to register in order to become a member, while others
require no registration.
Moderators
Most types
of discussion groups, announcement lists and forums will have
one or more moderators. Moderators make sure that posts are
appropriate and try to prevent spammers from posting.
Posting
Guidelines
No matter
what type of list or group you join, each will have its own
set of posting guidelines. Make sure you always
review the guidelines and double-check your post prior to submission.
Not only will your message get posted more quickly, but it will
also save the moderator a great deal of time.
When posting
or replying to posts, make sure that you stay on topic. If you're
posting to a group that focuses on "Ezines," you wouldn't
want to post a question or information about "Gardening."
In addition, always be very tactful. Everyone is there to learn
and share information. There is absolutely no reason to hurt
someone's feeling by publicly humiliating them or being rude.
Keep in mind, there is a human being with feelings behind each
post.
When posting
to an announcement group, make sure you follow the posting guidelines.
Not only will this save the list owner a great deal of time,
but it will also prevent you from having to repost your message
when it gets rejected.
In addition
to following the guidelines, make sure that you don't post your
message more than once. Announcement lists receive many submissions
and only send out a certain number of posts each day. It may
take up to a week or longer before your message is approved.
Reposting only serves to delay the process even longer.
Unsubscribing
In order
to remove yourself or unsubscribe from an ezine, discussion
group or announcement list, you must follow the instructions
for each individual publication. Some lists will provide a link
that will instantly remove your email address. Others will require
you to send an email message to remove yourself. However, you
MUST send the unsubscribe email message from the same address
you used to subscribe.
Many times,
subscribers may use an email address that redirects to their
main email account. When they try to remove themselves from
a list, they can't remember which address they used to subscribe.
This causes them to become frustrated and take their anger out
on the list owner. There is no way for a list owner to determine
what email address a subscriber used to subscribe to the list.
However, there is a way you can locate the address yourself
and save yourself and the list owner a great deal of frustration.
If you're
using Outlook:
Under the "View" menu, select "Message header"
or "Source."
If you're
using Eudora:
Click on the "Bla bla" button.
By viewing
the message headers, you can determine what email address the
message was sent to. This is the email address you used to subscribe
to the group. Your unsubscribe message MUST come from this address
in order to locate it within the database.
SPAM
Professional
list owners will NEVER add your email address to their database
without your knowledge. Most of the time, if you're receiving
their publication, you subscribed and may have forgotten. Keep
in mind, the keyword is "Professional" list owners.
There are many list owners that use unethical means of obtaining
email addresses.
Before making
a "SPAM" complaint, it is VERY important that you
understand the consequences. NEVER make a SPAM complaint unless
you are absolutely positive that it is, in fact, SPAM. It is
much better to delete one hundred potential SPAM messages than
to wrongly accuse one innocent publisher of SPAM. What you probably
don't realize is that when you make a SPAM complaint about a
publication, yourcomplaint also affects advertisers and article
writers thathave no affiliation with the publication. One SPAM
complaint can cost an innocent publisher, advertiser and writer
their entire business. It's just not worth it.
Advertising
Although
many ezines will allow you to purchase advertising, discussion
groups, announcement lists and forums DO NOT allow blatant advertising.
This is considered SPAM and will probably get you immediately
removed. Most groups will allow you to include your signature.
Make sure you review the guidelines prior to posting.
If we all
work together and follow a few simple guidelines, we can make
the Internet a better place for us all.
About
the Author
Shelley
Lowery is a successful full time Internet marketer and founder
of Web-Source.net.
Web-source.net provides the latest Internet technology for web
design and development from some of the top online professionals.
The site assists the entrepreneur in developing a serious Web
presence by providing a wealth of free information, resources,
tools and content!