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Leaders Offer Best Practices and Fresh Ideas for B2B Subscription Marketing

The great B2B media subscription push continues. It has been years since the subscription economy emerged, and subscription-based services like Netflix, video games, enterprise software and cloud storage became as common as cellphones and streaming. But in media, subscriptions can be a more difficult lift.

The New York Times has more than six million digital subscribers, and the Washington Post has more than three million. And yes, one bright spot in an otherwise exceedingly difficult last 15 months for B2B media has been subscriptions.

But the subscription business is expensive. It’s time and labor intensive. It requires a high level of marketing skill and multiple channels to break through the blizzard of free information. Most of all, a successful subscription business needs a highly defined market, usually a vertical market, and a product that an audience perceives is mission critical enough to pay for.

We spoke to five media executives about how to succeed with a B2B subscriptions business now. Log in to read more.

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SIIA Supports Infrastructure Investment in Broadband

$1 Trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill invests in roads, bridges and bridging the digital divide

(August 3, 2021) – Software and Information Industry Association (SIIA) President and CEO Jeff Joseph issued the following statement today regarding the $1 Trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill:

“The Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill is a wise and needed investment that will benefit America today and help us build for our future. This legislation is more than building bridges, it’s about building opportunity across America. 

“Broadband is infrastructure. SIIA enthusiastically supports expanding broadband into rural and underserved communities and planning for how to deploy broadband to bring new educational and vocational opportunities to learners previously left behind.

“Our members rely on broadband to deliver educational opportunities, connect educators with learners, and bring the latest technology to students who are often left behind. Moreover, broadband is a necessary tool for our members who deliver critical information, data, and content to drive growth and innovation in finance, healthcare, and myriad business sectors. Recently, as part of a digital marketing seminar, I learned how broadband connectivity also plays a crucial role in the rising popularity of online gaming platforms. One particular example that stood out was Aviator spielen, a simple yet engaging game that has gained traction across many unregulated online gambling sites. The ease of access to these platforms, driven by high-speed internet, has allowed games like Aviator to flourish, despite the legal and ethical concerns surrounding offshore gambling websites. This connectivity fuels both positive advancements and raises important questions about the responsible use of technology in entertainment and education alike.”

“Finally, the bill also addresses the need to rebuild our nation’s physical infrastructure to allow for the movement of goods, publications, and supply chains. 

“The Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill is an investment in America’s future. Congress must move this forward and begin crucial investments in closing the digital divide and upgrading our highways, air transport systems, bridges and more that provide the backbone of our economy.”  

Jeff Joseph is the president of SIIA, an association that acts as the voice for the specialized information industry whose members provide the critical data, content and information that drives the global economy.

About SIIA:

SIIA is the only professional organization connecting more than 700 data, financial information, education technology, specialized content and publishing, and health technology companies. Our diverse members manage the global financial markets, develop software that solves today’s challenges through technology, provide critical information that helps inform global businesses large and small, and innovate for better health care and personal wellness outcomes – they drive innovation and growth. For more information, visit www.siia.net.

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Create Curiosity, Hyperlink Carefully, Use Active Verbs and ‘Tee it Up’ to Help Get Your Content Read

In two articles that won 2021 EXCEL Awards, the American Geophysical Union science news product EOS delivers well-written previews and different ways to engage.

“At a critical moment in the effort to end one of the world’s worst oil spills, one scientist holed up in his office and pulled an all-nighter to calculate the well’s aquifer support,” subheads Modeling Under Pressure, a silver EXCEL winner for Featured Article.

“Of course our building is accessible—there is only one small step to get inside.” That quote leads one of the sections for the article Creating Spaces for Geoscientists with Disabilities to Thrive, gold EXCEL winner for D&I Initiative Feature Article (placed next to the wonderful photo you see here – credit: Anita Marshall). Another section begins: “Sorry, but you can’t come on the research trip—you’d be a liability in the field.”

These are all powerful and engaging uses of words—and a picture. The latter article is part 1 of a series produced in collaboration with AGU’s Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Committee. We all work very hard to produce top-notch content, but the work cannot end there. In these contend-with-so-many-distractions times, we also need to focus on ways to get our content read—whether that’s catchy promo blurbs, sensible hyperlinks, complementary photos and other curiosity-building methods.

But we can’t give too much away!

Earlier in her career, for a story recommending the most beautiful places to travel in the UK, Sarah Ebner, head of newsletters for the Financial Times, said that “we didn’t say where this place was, but teed it up with a description and then ‘find out where.’” The clicks were huge. The lesson is good, but I also love the phrase, “teed it up.” Word choices matter.

Arriving at the Financial Times just a few months ago, Ebner “was surprised to see that the breaking news alerts consisted of a few paragraphs with a ‘read more’ CTA at the end. Putting so much detail in these emails meant that there was no huge impetus to click through,” she wrote this week in an article on the INMA site.

“We had given too much of the story away already. We made some simple changes, changing these alerts to only one paragraph, and altering ‘read more’ to ‘read the full story.’ The click-through rate went up by 41% in a month.”

In a blog post on ASBPE, Scott Costa, publisher at tED Magazine, also talked about the importance of curiosity in your teaser copy. When the online daily newsletter is finished, he said, “[we] go through [to] make sure all the links work, the headlines have some punch, the subheads don’t give the whole story away and it looks really pretty. Our goal is to have the e-newsletter to our subscribers by noon Central Time, because our analytics show if it goes out any earlier or later, we will not get the maximum potential number of opens.”

Here are other ideas to make your content more noticed.

Never “more”? As she wrote, Ebner is “not a huge fan of ‘read more,’” but she does like “read the full/entire story” and “do you agree?” which she calls “so very clickable! All these small tweaks in language can be effective.” Being someone who spends time looking up words like “maintain vs. sustain” and other linguistic decisions, I agree that small word choices do matter. I use “read more” but will try what she suggests.

Make your CTA clear. What action are you asking the audience member to take? “Phrases like ‘click here,’ ‘learn more,’ ‘sign up’ and ‘download here’ are quick, simple and clear on how you are asking your audience to engage with the email,” publishing partner Omeda writes. “Also, consider having the CTA in the subject line as well.” A recent email study reported that using ALL CAPS in the “From” address gets a 19% higher open rate. And first-word capitalization in the subject line raises open rates 14% (Example: FINAL DAY: Free Registration to Tomorrow’s Webcast). While different rules apply in the marketing world, we editorial folks can still learn from them.

Use your preheader. The preheader is the first snippet of text in your email that appears next to your subject line. People see it before they even open the email. While only 11% use them, emails with a preheader get much higher average open rates—27.82% vs 21.46%. They also have much more impact than personalized subject lines. A preheader should complement your subject line.

Hyperlink the best choice of words. “I’ve seen newsletters that have a good story you’d like to read more of, but which hyperlink oddly, making you less likely to click,” Ebner writes. “I also regularly spot single words hyperlinked, sometimes seemingly at random! If there’s something we really want readers to click on, then I’m a proponent of making this as easy as possible.”

Deploy active verbs in subject lines. “Using words like ‘acquires,’ ‘accuses,’ ‘dies,’ ‘splits,’ or ‘expands’ grabs the attention inside email inboxes that are usually pretty cluttered,” said Costa. “We have to accept that many times negative news leads to a lot of open e-newsletters. Popular people or businesses could lead to many more. We pick out those selling points very carefully when we create our headlines for stories and subject lines for e-newsletters.”

“Think like your readers every day,” said Costa. “It is so easy to think about yourself and strategize about what you would like to read. Your readers might be completely different… [They] only have minutes to consume all of the day’s news from all sources in the world. Then they have other tasks, and their news consumption time is gone. You spend your day gathering news and deciding what to send out. Your day is completely different from your readers’ days.”

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With Data Driving Purchases, Cecala and Inside Mortgage Finance Embrace Hybrid Work Environment

With renewal rates in the 90s and data heading their offerings, founder and CEO Guy Cecala is pleased with where Inside Mortgage Finance stands and where the 37 year-old company is headed with new leadership next year. Mortgage lending did well during the pandemic, and that led to a good year for his company. “We stick to our knitting,” he said.

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SIIA Expresses Support For National Deepfake and Digital Provenance Task Force

SIIA Expresses Support For National Deepfake and Digital Provenance Task Force
New Legislation A Critical First Step to Combat Digital Forgeries 

Washington, D.C. (July 29, 2021) – Software and Information Industry Association (SIIA) President and CEO Jeff Joseph issued the following statement today regarding the Deepfake Task Force Act introduced today by Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Gary Peters (D-MI):

“The bipartisan Deep Fake Task Force Act introduced today is a critical step toward combating the scourge of so-called deep fakes – an abuse of artificial intelligence to create realistic-looking fake media. The goal is simple and important: Establish a National Deepfake and Digital Provenance Task Force to explore ways to verify digital content and begin to create and implement a national strategy to address the growing threat of digital content forgeries.  

“Our members include trusted sources that provide an array of accurate, beneficial information that helps fuel business, drive financial markets and improve outcomes in education and healthcare. The spread of misinformation presents a legitimate threat not only to our member organizations but to our democracy itself, eroding public trust in our institutions and communications channels. This proposed legislation seeks to create a government partnership with the private sector to leverage expertise on both sides to fight misinformation, using the ability of the government to convene experts across different sectors. This strategic partnership is both pro-innovation and pro-democracy.

“Trust in facts is a cornerstone of American democracy and a free and open society. Disinformation and distrust of the media have been major contributors to our socially, politically and economically polarized culture. Our society cannot function without accurate information and the fundamental ability to trust what we are seeing, hearing and watching. The spread of misinformation is real and it is harmful. We support this landmark effort to begin to restore trust. 

About SIIA:

SIIA is the only professional organization connecting more than 700 data, financial information, education technology, specialized content and publishing, and health technology companies. Our diverse members manage the global financial markets, develop software that solves today’s challenges through technology, provide critical information that helps inform global businesses large and small, and innovate for better health care and personal wellness outcomes – they drive innovation and growth. For more information, visit www.siia.net.